English

TvA 6 still has ‘sick building syndrome’

25 Oct 2016

Thomas van Aquinostraat 6 is still causing health problems, despite the university’s interventions. 'Working here in the knowledge that it might be damaging my health is not a good feeling.'

There was a strange smell in the air when the department of Cultural Anthropology and Development Studies moved to Thomas van Aquinostraat 6, at the end of 2014. According to lecturer and researcher Francien van Driel, staff complained about the stench right from the start. She only began to suspect that something might be seriously wrong when she ended up in hospital. ‘My GP advised me to stop working there as soon as possible’, she says. ‘I haven’t had a migraine attack since I left.’
Lots of staff have reported health problems: headaches, nausea, sore throats, shortness of breath, sore eyes. The sheer variety of problems made it difficult to isolate the cause.

Air vents
Accommodation coordinator at the Faculty of Social Sciences Esther Huijs says that the university took measures immediately after the first complaints came in: air vents were fitted to get rid of the musty smell in the rooms. Staff working on the second floor were moved to the first. An independent investigation commissioned by the Department of Occupational Health and Safety and Environmental Service (AMD) concluded that a chemical smell present in one room was probably caused by a stale pot of glue. As all the readings were under the permitted levels, the report could only conclude that the air was not a health hazard. ‘People felt unwell in four particular rooms’, says Huijs. ‘We tried all sorts of things, including changing the carpets. Nothing seemed to help so we decided to take the rooms out of service.’

Powerless
And yet the people working on the first and second floors are still reporting problems. ‘A lot of the complaints are informal; people don’t want to make a fuss’, says Lau Schulpen, who works in the room next to Van Driel’s old office. ‘The symptoms tend to be vague and vary in severity, so people don’t report them. Opening the windows to ventilate helps to a certain extent, but that’s not a viable option in the winter.’

Schulpen wants to keep things in perspective: ‘The process could have been swifter and more transparent, but I think the university has done all that it can.’ Van Driel and other staff agree. ‘A case of institutional powerlessness’, is how Van Driel puts it.

Esther Huijs intends to keep monitoring staff health problems. Having said this, the people working there will simply have to put up with it until 2020 when they move to the new Faculty of Social Sciences building. Schulpen: ‘I don’t have any health problems as far as I know, but working here in the knowledge that it might be damaging my health is not a good feeling.’

1 Comment

  1. Ivan wrote on 26 oktober 2016 at 05:37

    You might brand me a nutcase for writing this, but whatever. 🙂 If all physical causes of the problem have been exhausted like the article says, then it is possible that this is something paranormal in nature. Spirits leave behind smells which have no apparent source and ‘come out of nowhere’. What is this buildings history? Any deaths/tragic events?

    Yes – I’m saying the building could be haunted!

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