
Pathway to Clean Indoor Air in Victoria
The pandemic highlighted how much the air we breathe indoors impacts our health, wellbeing and productivity.
Many of the risks from breathing hazardous air are concentrated indoors, where people spend up to 90% of their time. These risks include airborne infections, bushfire smoke, allergens, pollution, and mould. Exposure to these pollutants leads to poor indoor air quality, which is linked to a wide range of health issues including respiratory illness, fatigue and cognitive impacts. It also affects accessibility, wellbeing, and workplace productivity—contributing to absenteeism and broader economic losses.
With support from the Victorian Government, Burnet has launched the Pathway to Clean Indoor Air in Victoria—a 2-year research project that tests solutions in real-world settings to identify scalable, evidence-based solutions for improving indoor air quality in schools, public spaces and public sector offices.
The project follows a systematic approach by:
- implementing and evaluating feasibility, acceptability, and cost-effectiveness of interventions such as HEPA filtration, ventilation upgrades, and sensor-based air monitoring;
- developing practical guidance for managing indoor air quality across different environments;
- exploring policy options to support long-term reform.
News

Grattan on Friday: Experts want Albanese to lead on indoor air quality as part of pandemic planning
Published in The Conversation.

Transformative project to improve indoor air quality in Victoria
Burnet welcomes the Victorian Government's $9.87m investment in the Pathway to Clean Indoor Air project.
Achievements
- August 2025: First pilot site launched at Victoria’s City of Darebin council offices.
- July 2024: Project receives $9.8m investment from Victorian Government




Tap an image to expand it in focused view
In August 2025, we launched our first pilot site at Victoria’s City of Darebin council offices. The indoor air quality sensors monitor real-time indoor air quality, combined with practical ventilation and air filtration systems.
Objectives
The project aims to establish a coordinated, evidence-based approach to improving indoor air quality across Victoria. The vision is to reduce the health, social and economic impacts of indoor airborne infections and pathogens across the state.
The Pathway to Clean Indoor Air in Victoria project aims to position clean indoor air as a core component of public health, education, and workplace infrastructure. Our key objectives are to:
- implement and test practical, evidence-based interventions to improve indoor air quality across schools, public buildings, and community spaces
- evaluate what works by gathering real-world evidence on the feasibility, acceptability, and cost of IAQ solutions like ventilation upgrades, HEPA filtration, and sensor-based monitoring
- support implementation through user-friendly technical guidance for facility managers
- measure the impact by quantifying improvements in indoor air quality and drawing on existing evidence that links clean air with improved health outcomes
- drive systemic reform by identifying scalable models, policy levers and legislative options to embed indoor air quality into long-term planning and governance frameworks.
Benefits to the community
Clean indoor air represents the next frontier in public health, comparable to how scientific evidence and engineering transformed public health clean water and sanitation in the mid-20th century.
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the critical importance of airborne transmission in the spread of infections (such as influenza, colds and other viruses). Strategies such as improved ventilation to dilute and remove contaminated air, filtration systems to capture infectious particles and air disinfection technologies that neutralise pathogens are now understood as important layers of protection that complement other public health measures.
Beyond the pandemic, it is well-known that air pollution, including smoke from bushfires, gas stoves, tobacco and pollen, have short- and long-term impacts on our health, the economy, and society.
Studies in schools and workplaces have shown improving air quality enhances test performance, attendance and cognitive performance.
Strengthening IAQ is both a public health imperative and a critical safeguard for maintaining business continuity, reducing reliance on disruptive emergency measures and ensuring workplaces, schools, and public spaces remain operational in times of crisis.
One of the most powerful aspects of clean indoor air solutions is that they operate in the background as passive controls. When delivered at scale in public settings, clean air strategies promote health equity by protecting everyone who shares the space.
Burnet aims to develop a knowledge base that will support the provision of clean indoor air across our society. This will reduce the impact of infectious diseases, pollutants and allergens on our health, wellbeing and the economy.
Student opportunities
Work with Know-C19
If you’re interested in working with us, please reach out to Siddhanth Sharma.
Report
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Clean indoor air: 2024 collaboration and global action
The "2024 Clean Indoor Air" report highlights the significant health and economic impacts of poor indoor air quality. It urges national collaborative action for transformational public health benefits and productivity gains.
Clean indoor air brochure [PDF 6.6 MB]
Partners
Funding partners
Victorian Department of Treasury and Finance
Collaborators
- University of Melbourne
- Monash University
- Queensland University of Technology
- Amazon Web Services
- CSIRO
Project contacts
Main contact
Student supervisor contact

Dr Siddhanth Sharma
Public Health Specialist
Project team
Technical directors

Associate Professor Suman Majumdar
Technical Director

Daniel West
Deputy Technical Director
Scientific working group

Professor Helen Cox
Working Group Head

Guy Marks
Head, Lung Health; Senior Principal Research Fellow
Professor Jason Monty
Head of School of Electrical, Mechanical and Infrastructure Engineering
University of Melbourne
Professor Lidia Morawska
Distinguished Professor and Australian Laureate Fellow
Queensland University of Technology
Associate Professor Andrew Stewardson
Infection Prevention and Healthcare Epidemiology
Alfred Health; Monash Univesity
Dr Simon Joosten
Respiratory and Sleep Medicine Physician
Monash Health

Associate Professor Nick Scott
Head, Modelling and Biostatistics
More team members
Jithma Beneragama
Collaborator
Amazon Web Services

Professor Brendan Crabb AC
Chief Executive Officer

Ryan Barwood
General Manager

Christabelle Adjoyan
Project Director

Elizabeth Dang
Program Manager

Dr Siddhanth Sharma
Public Health Specialist

Logan Wu
Data and Systems Manager
