Smoke in the forecast? Read the Brooklyn Smoke‑Day Playbook →
The Brooklyn smoke‑day playbook

When the sky turns orange, your home has a job.

Wildfire smoke now reaches Brooklyn most summers. The good news: a closed‑up room with a right‑sized HEPA purifier can hold fine particles near clean‑day levels even when it's 150+ outside. Here's the whole playbook — calm, specific, and free.

No sign‑up required to read it. That's the point.

First, the numbers

What the AQI actually means

The Air Quality Index is the outdoor number in every headline. Your job on a smoke day is to make your indoor number tell a different story.

0–100Fine for nearly everyone. Live your life; maybe skip the marathon at the top of the range.
101–150“Unhealthy for sensitive groups” — kids, older adults, anyone with asthma or heart conditions. Close up, run filtration, shorten outdoor time for the sensitive.
151+Unhealthy for everyone. Windows closed, purifiers on, outdoor errands brief, N95 if you're out for long. Playbook below.

A well‑sealed room with adequate filtration should hold indoor PM2.5 in the single digits (µg/m³) even during an outdoor advisory. If you own a monitor, that's the number to watch — not the one on the news.

Before smoke season

Get ready on a clear day

Upgrade the filter you already own

If you have central air or a unit that takes a real filter, check the rating. MERV 13 captures smoke particles well — confirm your system can handle it (most can; older motors sometimes can't). Write the size on your phone so reordering is one tap.

Right‑size one HEPA purifier per sleeping room

The quick rule: the purifier's smoke CADR (in cfm, on the box) should be at least two‑thirds of the room's square footage. A 12×15 bedroom is 180 sq ft — look for CADR 120 or higher. Bigger is quieter, because you can run it on low.

Renters: the box‑fan option is real

A box fan with a MERV‑13 furnace filter strapped to the back (or the four‑filter “Corsi–Rosenthal” cube) moves serious clean air for about $60. Ugly, effective, beloved by scientists.

Find your recirculate button

Window units, PTACs, and central systems all have a mode that cools the air you already have instead of pulling from outside. Know where it is before you need it.

Stash a few N95s

They work on smoke the way they work on everything else — when worn snug, outdoors, for the errands you can't skip.

During an advisory

The day-of routine

Close the envelope

Windows shut, including the ones you forget — bathroom, stairwell‑facing, the kid's room. If your building hallway smells smoky, a rolled towel at the door helps more than you'd think.

AC on, set to recirculate

Cooling and filtration beat fresh‑air intake on a smoke day. Heat guidance still wins overall: if your home gets dangerously hot, prioritize getting cool.

Run purifiers high, doors closed

Purifiers clean rooms, not apartments. Put them where people actually are — the room with the kids beats the hallway with the outlet.

Don't add smoke to smoke

Skip frying, broiling, candles, and vacuuming (it stirs up settled particles). Tonight is a lid‑on‑the‑pot kind of night.

Watch your indoor number

If you have a monitor, indoor PM2.5 is your scoreboard. Rising indoors? Find the open window or the gap — the number will lead you to it.

After it clears

Let the house exhale

Flush with fresh air

When the outdoor AQI drops back under ~100, open up and air the place out — cross‑ventilation for 20–30 minutes clears what seeped in.

Check the filters that worked hard

After a heavy event or a heavy season, inspect purifier and HVAC filters. A loaded filter is a filter that did its job — and one that's ready to retire early.

The obvious question

Does your home hold the line?

That's literally what the audit measures — how your rooms perform with the windows closed and the filtration running, plus the exact sizing your home needs. September founding cohort: eight Brooklyn homes, $395, payment after.

Request a September audit

Smoke‑day heads‑up

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One email with this playbook to keep, plus a short heads‑up when a smoke advisory hits the city and when September booking opens. No newsletter, no noise.

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