Last updated: 5 Jun 2026 | 46 Views |
Phair, a 29-year-old freelance graphic designer, says the day she inherited her grandmother's two-storey teak house in Bang Kruai, Nonthaburi was the best and hardest day of her life at the same time. The best, because this house held her entire childhood — honey-coloured teak posts, wide plank floors, a second-floor balcony looking out over the old mango tree. The hardest, because the moment she opened the front door after the house had been closed up for three months, the smell that hit her face was not the warm scent of teak she remembered. It was the sharp, sinus-stinging reek of mothballs, as if the whole house had been sealed inside an old medicine cabinet.
Phair's grandmother belonged to the generation that believed mothballs were a miracle cure for everything. She tucked them everywhere: inside all four teak wardrobes, the bedside drawer chests, the big fabric trunk under the stairs, the book crates, the bathroom corners, even under the kitchen cupboard. She kept this up for more than 30 years, topping up fresh balls every time the old ones sublimated away. On her first day in the house, Phair collected an entire bag of them — more than a hundred mothballs — then threw open every window for a full week, confident the smell would simply fade.
A month later, the smell was still there, all of it. Every wardrobe she opened, every drawer she pulled, every fold of the curtains she had already washed twice — the odor came back within days of rehanging them. Grandma's kapok mattress, sun-dried for three full days, still reeked. And the thing that broke her heart most was the teak itself. Press your nose against a cabinet door and you could tell: the mothball smell was coming out of the wood, not just sitting on the surface.
Phair started researching seriously after two weeks of living in the house left her with a dull headache every evening. What she found kept her awake at night. Most traditional mothballs are made of naphthalene, a substance the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), under the World Health Organization (WHO), classifies as Group 2B — "possibly carcinogenic to humans." Information from the US EPA adds that continuous inhalation of naphthalene vapor is associated with headaches, nausea and — most alarmingly — hemolytic anemia, the destruction of red blood cells, especially in infants and small children.
That last sentence froze her for an entire night. She and her fiancé were planning a wedding at the end of the year and wanted to raise children in this very house. The home she intended for her new family had the vapor of a red-blood-cell-destroying chemical seeping out of every square inch of its timber.
Almost 45,000 baht gone on treating the symptoms — while the root cause, the naphthalene molecules embedded deep inside the teak, remained completely untouched.
Phair had planned to use the ground floor as a home office for client meetings. One day a cosmetics-brand client came to discuss a project. Ten minutes into the meeting, the client asked softly, "Sorry — is that a smell? It's like... mothballs?" Phair managed a dry smile and said it was an old house, she was dealing with it. Inside, her confidence collapsed. Design is a business of selling taste, and the house that was supposed to be her storefront smelled like everyone's memory of an elderly relative's clothes chest. After that day she moved all client meetings to cafés — losing both money and the home-office dream she had built the whole renovation around.
Before finding the real solution, Phair tried every trick the internet recommends. Here is the scientific reason each one fails against naphthalene that has been accumulating for three decades.
The conclusion Phair reached: this is not a cleaning problem, it is a chemistry problem. As long as the naphthalene molecule keeps its structure intact, it will keep releasing odor and vapor. The only permanent fix is to destroy the molecule itself.
The turning point came from an architect friend who renovates hotels. He told Phair that when a hotel discovers a room with cigarette smoke or deeply embedded musty odor that housekeeping cannot defeat, they do not reach for sprays or perfume — they call in an ozone treatment. He pointed her to World Health Disinfection (WHD), a company providing residential ozone disinfection with the same team trusted by luxury hotels including The Ritz-Carlton, Fraser Suites, Dusit International and Andaz Hotels & Resorts.
The principle behind ozone treatment matched exactly what Phair had discovered. Ozone gas (O₃) is a powerful oxidizer. Released throughout the house, the ozone molecules penetrate everywhere air can reach — into the pores of the teak, into drawer joints, behind cabinets, through curtain fibres, deep into kapok mattresses — and oxidize the naphthalene molecules directly, breaking apart their ring structure. The smell does not get masked; it ceases to exist. And when the job is done, the ozone naturally decomposes back into oxygen (O₂), 100%, leaving zero chemical residue in the house where she planned to raise children.
There was a bonus Phair had not expected: at treatment concentrations, ozone also kills 99.99% of viruses, bacteria, mold, dust mites and allergens — critically important for an old wooden house that had been shut for months and was filled with decades-old mattresses, fabric trunks and keepsakes. This aligns with guidance from Thailand's Department of Disease Control, which warns that long-sealed homes become reservoirs of mold and dust mites that trigger allergies and respiratory illness.
"The day the WHD team opened the house back up after the treatment, I went straight to the wardrobe with the worst smell. I pressed my nose against the cabinet door the way I always did — the way that always broke my heart. This time... there was only the warm scent of teak. The same scent as falling asleep in Grandma's arms when I was little. I stood there crying alone in front of that wardrobe for five minutes. It felt like getting Grandma's house back for real — not just the building, but the smell of home itself. The renovation is finished now and I host clients here every week. The same client who once asked 'what is that smell?' came back and said the house smells wonderfully of wood. I only regret the fifty thousand baht I wasted trying everything myself first. If I had known a service like this existed, I would have called WHD on day one."
— Phair, 29, graphic designer and owner of an inherited teak house in Bang Kruai, Nonthaburi
Special promotion: when your service total reaches 15,000 baht, receive a free medical-grade disinfection spray treatment with CHEMGENE HLD4H solution from the UK — an extra layer of assurance for your heritage home.
In most cases, a single properly planned intensive treatment produces a clearly noticeable result, because ozone destroys the odor molecules directly. If the odor is exceptionally deep-set, the team will identify this during the site assessment and tell you upfront how many rounds are advisable — no surprises engineered just to close the job quickly.
No. Ozone treatment is a 100% dry process — no water, no moisture, no scrubbing. Teak timber, antique furniture, old photographs and electronics are all safe. The WHD team has treated luxury hotel rooms filled with high-value furnishings for over a decade using this same process.
During the treatment, all people, pets and plants must leave the house, because high-concentration ozone is not safe to breathe directly. After the treatment, the team ventilates and waits for the ozone to decompose back into oxygen to a safe level before inviting the owner back in. Most jobs are completed start to finish within a single day.
None. This is the single greatest strength of the method: ozone decomposes 100% naturally back into oxygen (O₂), leaving no film and no chemicals — unlike perfume sprays or odor-masking agents that add chemicals into the home. That makes it ideal for families planning a baby or living with elderly relatives.
Pricing depends on floor area, number of storeys and odor severity. The team provides a free assessment after reviewing your site details — call 065-556-6294 or add LINE @whd268. And when your total reaches 15,000 baht, you receive the free medical-grade CHEMGENE HLD4H disinfection spray treatment as added value.
Do not let 30 years of mothball odor decide the future of a house you love. Let a professional team with five-star hotel standards destroy the odor at its source — safely, with zero residue.
See Residential Ozone Disinfection Service Details — Click HereCall 065-556-6294
LINE: @whd268 — Nationwide service across Thailand
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