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Article

Synergistic Air Quality and Cooling Efficiency in Office Space with Indoor Green Walls

by
Ibtihaj Saad Rashed Alsadun
1,
Faizah Mohammed Bashir
2,*,
Zahra Andleeb
3,
Zeineb Ben Houria
3,
Mohamed Ahmed Said Mohamed
4 and
Oluranti Agboola
5
1
Department of Fine Arts, University of Hail, Hail 55473, Saudi Arabia
2
Department of Decoration and Interior Design Engineering, University of Hail, Hail 55473, Saudi Arabia
3
Department of Industrial Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Hail, Hail 55473, Saudi Arabia
4
Department of Architectural Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Hail, Hail 55473, Saudi Arabia
5
Department of Chemical Engineering, Covenant University, Ota 112233, Nigeria
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Buildings 2025, 15(20), 3656; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15203656 (registering DOI)
Submission received: 29 August 2025 / Revised: 29 September 2025 / Accepted: 3 October 2025 / Published: 11 October 2025
(This article belongs to the Section Building Energy, Physics, Environment, and Systems)

Abstract

Enhancing indoor environmental quality while reducing building energy consumption represents a critical challenge for sustainable building design, particularly in hot arid climates where cooling loads dominate energy use. Despite extensive research on green wall systems (GWSs), robust quantitative data on their combined impact on air quality and thermal performance in real-world office environments remains limited. This research quantified the synergistic effects of an active indoor green wall system on key indoor air quality indicators and cooling energy consumption in a contemporary office environment. A comparative field study was conducted over 12 months in two identical office rooms in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, with one room serving as a control while the other was retrofitted with a modular hydroponic green wall system. High-resolution sensors continuously monitored indoor CO2, volatile organic compounds via photoionization detection (VOC_PID; isobutylene-equivalent), and PM2.5 concentrations, alongside dedicated sub-metering of cooling energy consumption. The green wall system achieved statistically significant improvements across all parameters: 14.1% reduction in CO2 concentrations during occupied hours, 28.1% reduction in volatile organic compounds, 20.9% reduction in PM2.5, and 13.5% reduction in cooling energy consumption (574.5 kWh annually). Economic analysis indicated financial viability (2.0-year payback; benefit–cost ratio 3.0; 15-year net present value SAR 31,865). Productivity-related benefits were valued from published relationships rather than measured in this study; base-case viability remained strictly positive in energy-only and conservative sensitivity scenarios. Strong correlations were established between evapotranspiration rates and cooling benefits (r = 0.734), with peak performance during summer months reaching 17.1% energy savings. Active indoor GWSs effectively function as multifunctional strategies, delivering simultaneous air quality improvements and measurable cooling energy reductions through evapotranspiration-mediated mechanisms, supporting their integration into sustainable building design practices.
Keywords: active hydroponic living wall; evapotranspiration cooling; CO2 reduction; PM2.5; volatile organic compounds measured by PID (VOC_PID; isobutylene-equivalent); cognitive performance; hot arid climate; cost–benefit analysis active hydroponic living wall; evapotranspiration cooling; CO2 reduction; PM2.5; volatile organic compounds measured by PID (VOC_PID; isobutylene-equivalent); cognitive performance; hot arid climate; cost–benefit analysis

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Alsadun, I.S.R.; Bashir, F.M.; Andleeb, Z.; Ben Houria, Z.; Mohamed, M.A.S.; Agboola, O. Synergistic Air Quality and Cooling Efficiency in Office Space with Indoor Green Walls. Buildings 2025, 15, 3656. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15203656

AMA Style

Alsadun ISR, Bashir FM, Andleeb Z, Ben Houria Z, Mohamed MAS, Agboola O. Synergistic Air Quality and Cooling Efficiency in Office Space with Indoor Green Walls. Buildings. 2025; 15(20):3656. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15203656

Chicago/Turabian Style

Alsadun, Ibtihaj Saad Rashed, Faizah Mohammed Bashir, Zahra Andleeb, Zeineb Ben Houria, Mohamed Ahmed Said Mohamed, and Oluranti Agboola. 2025. "Synergistic Air Quality and Cooling Efficiency in Office Space with Indoor Green Walls" Buildings 15, no. 20: 3656. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15203656

APA Style

Alsadun, I. S. R., Bashir, F. M., Andleeb, Z., Ben Houria, Z., Mohamed, M. A. S., & Agboola, O. (2025). Synergistic Air Quality and Cooling Efficiency in Office Space with Indoor Green Walls. Buildings, 15(20), 3656. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15203656

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