Last updated: 4 Jun 2026 | 12 Views |
If you have just finished renovating your home or condo and you have noticed a dry cough at night, sneezing fits in the morning, or a mysterious itchy rash on your child — even after paying for a professional deep clean — this article was written for you. It is the true-to-life story of a young architect in Bangkok's Ratchada district, a man who believed he knew everything about buildings, until post-renovation dust and an invisible army of dust mites taught him a lesson that never appeared in any architecture textbook.
Poom, a 34-year-old architect, had spent nearly a decade designing homes and buildings for other people. When he finally bought a second-hand 62-square-metre condo near the Huai Khwang MRT station in Bangkok's Ratchadaphisek area, he made himself a promise: this renovation would be his masterpiece. A home where he, his wife, and their five-year-old daughter Khaohom could live happily for years to come.
The renovation took three full months. One internal wall came down to open up the living space. The floor was channelled to run new electrical conduits. Walls were re-plastered. A multi-level gypsum ceiling with concealed cove lighting went up across the living room and bedroom. A custom ash-wood built-in wardrobe was constructed and sanded on site over several weeks. The family moved into a small rental during the work, but the large pieces of furniture Poom loved too much to throw away — his favourite dark-grey fabric sofa, a six-foot latex mattress that had cost a small fortune, and a brand-new set of blackout curtains ordered just before the project started — stayed right there in the unit, wrapped in plastic sheeting. He had done the maths: storage and moving fees were not worth it. A tight plastic wrap, he reasoned, would surely be enough.
On handover day, Poom stood with his arms crossed, beaming at his new home. The recessed ceiling lighting was crisp and flawless. The polished light-grey cement walls were exactly as he had drawn them. The pale ash cabinetry matched the laminate flooring perfectly. He hired a professional housekeeping team for a full-day big cleaning session — every corner wiped, every inch vacuumed, the floor mopped three times until it gleamed — and then moved his family back in, feeling like a man who had won the lottery.
That happiness lasted less than two weeks.
The first few nights, Poom blamed exhaustion. Three months of supervising contractors will wear anyone down. A dry cough or two as he lay down, a glass of warm water, and he drifted back to sleep. But night after night, the coughing grew worse — always between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m., sometimes violent enough to force him to sit upright in the dark, his throat raw and scratchy, as though a layer of fine powder were permanently coating it. Meanwhile, his wife began waking up to machine-gun sneezing fits every morning, with a constantly running nose despite having no cold, and red, itchy eyes she could not stop rubbing.
Then one afternoon, little Khaohom started scratching her arms while watching cartoons. Her mother rolled up the child's sleeve and felt her heart drop — clusters of tiny red bumps spread across the creases of her elbows and the backs of her knees. The girl complained of itching so badly she could not sleep; some nights she scratched until her skin broke. The paediatric dermatologist diagnosed atopic dermatitis triggered by household allergens, and when he learned the family had just moved back into a freshly renovated condo, he nodded slowly, like a man who had seen this exact case a hundred times before.
Count the costs this family absorbed in a single month: two paediatric dermatology visits with creams and antihistamines, roughly 4,800 baht. Poom's own ENT consultation, another 2,200 baht. A new air purifier panic-purchased online, 12,900 baht. And then there were the costs no invoice can capture. Sleep deprivation caught up with Poom at work — he missed two critical details on a client drawing and got called out for it, denting a professional reputation he had spent ten years building. His wife, stretched thin and exhausted, finally said the sentence that cut him deepest: "Maybe we should never have renovated at all."
For a man who had devoted his career to designing happy homes for other people, that one sentence hurt more than every baht they had spent combined.
Poom switched into full designer-researcher mode. He combed through medical articles, indoor air quality studies, and forum threads from people with identical symptoms, until he uncovered two facts that left him sitting in stunned silence.
Cement dust from demolition and plastering, gypsum dust from ceiling work, and fine wood dust from sanding built-in furniture all produce particles in the 0.5–10 micron range — light enough to hang suspended in the air for hours before slowly settling and working their way deep into the fibres of fabric sofas, mattresses, pillows, and curtains. Plastic sheeting blocks coarse surface dust, but ultra-fine particles slip through every seam and gap, sinking into the inner layers of the fibre itself. Wiping, mopping, and ordinary vacuuming only ever clean the surface. And here is the cruel part: every time someone sits on that sofa or lies down on that mattress, the pressure squeezes those fine particles back up into the air — directly into the lungs of whoever is resting there. That is precisely why Poom's coughing peaked at night. He was sleeping on top of the dust source itself.
This is the part almost nobody talks about. Dust mites are microscopic arachnids — relatives of spiders, not insects — measuring just 0.1–0.3 millimetres, far too small to see with the naked eye. They already live in the mattresses, sofas, carpets, and curtains of virtually every home, feeding on the flakes of dead skin we shed daily. But a three-month renovation creates the perfect breeding storm: furniture sealed under plastic in a closed, humid room; no washing, no sunlight, no disturbance of any kind for months; temperature and humidity in the shuttered unit sitting right in the mites' ideal egg-laying range. The result is a silent population explosion happening directly beneath the plastic wrap Poom had been so proud of.
And the most insidious detail of all: the real allergy trigger is not the living mite. It is the faeces and decomposing body fragments of dust mites, which are loaded with concentrated allergenic proteins. Once airborne and inhaled, they trigger allergic rhinitis, asthma, atopic dermatitis, conjunctivitis, and chronic headaches. The World Health Organization (WHO) has long highlighted indoor air quality as a direct driver of respiratory health, and Thailand's Department of Disease Control consistently ranks dust mites among the country's leading household allergens.
To put it bluntly: Poom's family had moved back in and gone to sleep, night after night, on a mattress packed with fine cement dust layered over a freshly expanded dust mite colony — without the faintest idea. The best housekeeper in the world could not have fixed it, because the problem was buried deep inside the fibres, far beyond the reach of any cleaning cloth.
Before finding the real solution, Poom tried every remedy the internet had to offer. Here is his honest verdict on why each one falls short:
It helps — but only for the outer sheets. More than 90 percent of dust mites live deep inside the mattress core, which cannot be thrown into a washing machine. The cement and gypsum dust that seeped into the latex itself stays exactly where it is. You can wash the sheets until they smell like a spring meadow; that night, the whole family still sleeps on top of the same reservoir.
First question: where exactly do you sun-dry a 30-kilogram, six-foot mattress on the 18th floor of a condo tower? Even if you somehow could, sunlight only kills some of the mites near the surface, while the mite faeces — the actual allergen — do not break down or disappear. Worse, beating or thumping the mattress launches a cloud of faecal particles and fine dust straight into the face of whoever is doing the beating.
Standard vacuum cleaners cannot capture particles below roughly 0.3 microns. Gypsum dust and dust mite faeces smaller than that get sucked in and then blown straight back out through the exhaust vent — effectively excavating allergens from inside the mattress and spraying them around the room. Poom noticed it himself: every time he finished vacuuming, his wife's sneezing actually got worse.
Most sprays rely on chemicals that kill or repel a portion of the live mites — but the carcasses and faeces, the actual allergenic protein, remain piled inside the mattress exactly as before. And for a household with a sensitive-skinned five-year-old like Khaohom, spraying additional chemicals onto the very mattress she buries her face in every night is the last thing any parent wants to do.
Poom's conclusion after exhausting every option: this problem demands professional-grade equipment that can physically pull fine construction dust, live mites, carcasses, and faeces out of the deepest fibre layers — without letting a single particle escape back into the room, and without a single drop of chemicals.
One night, hunched over a glass of warm water at 2 a.m. between coughing fits, Poom picked up his phone and searched for an at-home dust mite removal service. That is how he found World Health Disinfection (WHD), the first company in Thailand to offer comprehensive dust mite removal combined with professional disinfection. What stopped his designer's eye mid-scroll was the equipment specification — written in the kind of technical detail that makes an engineer nod along involuntarily.
WHD operates the Sirena System, an innovation from Canada, built around a water filtration system that traps 100 percent of extracted dust in water, combined with a HEPA filter and driven by a 1200-watt Italian cyclone motor. It captures particles down to an astonishing 0.02 micron — several times smaller than dust mite faeces or gypsum dust — and carries certifications from the Asthma Society of Canada and TUV Rheinland of Germany.
The principle is elegantly simple yet devastatingly effective: instead of sucking dust into a cloth bag or plastic canister that fine particles can leak back out of, the Sirena machine pulls everything — cement dust, wood dust, gypsum dust, live mites, carcasses, and faeces — down into a tank of water, where it drowns. Water becomes a trap nothing escapes. And when the job is done, the customer gets to see that tank of water with their own eyes and discover exactly what had been hiding inside the mattress they sleep on every night.
The next morning, Poom called and booked the service without a second of hesitation.
Distilled from the first-hand experience of Poom's family, plus the technical arguments that won over a professional designer completely:
WHD pioneered comprehensive dust mite removal with disinfection in Thailand. The team has handled countless post-renovation homes and condos and knows precisely where construction dust hides and how to extract it completely.
Gypsum dust, fine cement particles, mite faeces, and skin flakes are all larger than 0.02 micron. The Sirena machine captures them all, with nothing escaping back into the room — a categorical difference from any household vacuum.
The water filtration system, working in tandem with the HEPA filter, locks everything extracted permanently in water. The air leaving the machine is actually cleaner than the air in the room — ideal for homes with allergy sufferers and small children.
This level of suction genuinely pulls dust and mites up from beneath the surface of even a thick latex mattress — not merely skimming the top the way consumer machines do.
The core process is purely physical — suction and filtration. It is safe for a sensitive-skinned five-year-old, pregnant women, the elderly, and asthma patients. The family can sleep on the mattress that very night, with no airing-out period required.
The detail that delights renovation households most: curtains are cleaned in place, without removal. Poom's enormous blackout curtains, saturated with cement dust, were treated right where they hung — saving thousands of baht in removal, laundering, and reinstallation fees.
These are not marketing slogans. They are endorsements from an international asthma association and one of Germany's most respected safety-testing institutes. For a specification-reading professional like an architect, this is the hardest evidence to argue with.
After finishing the mattress, the team opened the water tank for the family to inspect. Water that had been crystal clear at the start of the job had turned a thick, murky cement-grey from construction dust, wood dust, and dust mite sediment. Poom's wife gasped out loud: "We have been sleeping on top of this for a month?"
For households wanting an extra layer of assurance, a disinfectant spray treatment can be added after the dust mite extraction — eliminating both mites and the germs left behind by dozens of contractors moving in and out during construction, all in one appointment (see the full disinfection service for details).
Every customer receives complimentary WELLGIENIC disinfectant wet wipes and a bottle of CHEMGENE HLD4H spray — which kills 99.85 percent of germs within one minute and keeps protecting surfaces for up to 14 days. Perfect for doorknobs, the dining table, and a five-year-old's toys.
"I am an architect. I always assumed I knew houses inside out, but I will admit it straight: I badly underestimated post-renovation dust and dust mites. When the WHD team opened the water tank after extracting my mattress, the water was cement-grey — and that was just days after a professional big cleaning. That night I slept soundly for the first time in a month, and my daughter's rash faded within about a week. These days I tell every renovation client of mine the same thing: your post-renovation cleaning budget must always include a dust mite removal service. As far as I am concerned, that is the real project handover."
— Poom, architect and owner of a renovated condo in Ratchadaphisek, Bangkok
The ideal window is after the big cleaning is complete and before you move back in. Housekeepers handle hard surfaces well, but the fine dust and dust mites embedded in mattresses, sofas, carpets, and curtains require specialised equipment. That said, if you have already moved in, you can book at any time — the team comes to your home and nothing needs to be transported anywhere.
Cleaning crews focus on visible surfaces — floors, glass, walls, and the outside of furniture. The WHD dust mite removal service goes deep inside the fibres of bedding and upholstered furniture using the Sirena machine with 0.02-micron filtration. The two services complement each other; one is not a substitute for the other.
The core dust mite removal process uses no chemicals whatsoever — it is pure extraction through water filtration and a HEPA filter. It is completely safe for small children, pregnant women, the elderly, and allergy patients, and the mattress and sofa can be used immediately after the service. The disinfectant spray is an optional add-on, applied only at the customer's request.
Not a single panel needs to come down. This is one of WHD's signature strengths: curtains are cleaned in place with the Sirena machine, saving you removal fees, laundering fees, and reinstallation fees — and eliminating the risk of shrinkage or lost shape from washing.
Dust mite and allergen levels drop significantly immediately after the service. For households with allergy sufferers, a repeat treatment every three to six months is generally recommended, alongside regular hot-water washing of bed linens. The complimentary CHEMGENE HLD4H spray also extends surface protection for up to 14 days per application.
Let WHD's professional team deep-clean your mattress, sofa, carpet, and curtains with the Canadian Sirena system. 0.02-micron filtration, completely chemical-free, with results you feel from the very first night your head hits the pillow.
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Post-renovation dust mite removal by World Health Disinfection — Thailand's first comprehensive dust mite removal and disinfection service. Deep cleaning for mattresses, sofas, carpets, and curtains with the Canadian Sirena system: 0.02-micron filtration, zero chemicals, safe for the whole family.
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