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Household Airflow Comfort Map

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install household-airflow-comfort-map
Description
Creates a comfort-focused room airflow map, timing routine, and weekly review checklist for stuffy rooms without HVAC diagnosis, repair advice, allergy guida...
README (SKILL.md)

Household Airflow Comfort Map

Purpose

Help the user make an everyday comfort routine for rooms that feel stale, stuffy, or uneven. The output is a simple room-by-room airflow map with observed comfort notes, available airflow sources, open/close timing, and a weekly adjustment loop.

This skill is for household comfort planning only. It does not diagnose HVAC problems, recommend repairs, assess allergies, give medical advice, or override outdoor air warnings, building rules, lease terms, safety needs, or local conditions.

Use This Skill When

Use this skill when the user wants to:

  • Make a practical routine for rooms that feel stuffy or stagnant.
  • Compare which rooms feel better at different times of day.
  • Decide when to open or close safe windows, doors, vents, or fans already available.
  • Build a simple observation log for comfort patterns.
  • Create a weekly review checklist for small routine adjustments.

Do not use this skill for HVAC troubleshooting, repair diagnosis, mold assessment, smoke or carbon monoxide concerns, allergy treatment, asthma management, medical symptom interpretation, air quality certification, or emergency safety decisions.

Best Inputs

Ask only for details that make the map useful. If details are missing, continue with labeled assumptions.

  • Rooms to include and where people spend the most time.
  • Times rooms feel stuffy, stale, drafty, humid, hot, cold, or comfortable.
  • Safe airflow options already present: windows, interior doors, fans, range hood, bathroom exhaust, vents, shades, or curtains.
  • Constraints: security, pets, children, noise, privacy, insects, weather, outdoor air alerts, building rules, sleep schedule, or shared-household preferences.
  • Existing habits: when windows or doors are usually opened, when fans are used, and which rooms should stay closed.

Workflow

  1. Set the boundary. State that the plan is a comfort routine, not HVAC, repair, allergy, medical, mold, smoke, or carbon monoxide guidance.
  2. Map rooms. List each room, usual occupancy, comfort concern, and available safe airflow sources.
  3. Capture patterns. Note the times of day, weather conditions, activities, or occupancy patterns linked to discomfort.
  4. Check safety constraints. Avoid unsafe window use, unattended open windows, blocked exits, unsecured openings, and any action that conflicts with outdoor air warnings, local safety advice, building rules, or household security.
  5. Create a routine. Suggest simple timing blocks for safe opening, closing, fan direction, interior door position, shade/curtain use, and exhaust fan use where already available.
  6. Add observation notes. Provide a lightweight log so the user can record what changed and how the room felt.
  7. Review weekly. Summarize what to keep, pause, or test next week without diagnosing equipment or health causes.

Output Format

Return the plan in this order:

  1. Comfort Scope

Briefly state the routine boundary and any assumptions.

  1. Room Airflow Map
Room Main comfort issue Times noticed Existing airflow sources Constraints Routine idea
  1. Daily Timing Routine
Time block Open/close plan Fan or exhaust plan Shade/curtain plan Safety check
Morning
Midday
Evening
Overnight, if relevant
  1. Comfort Observation Log
Date:
Room:
Time:
Weather or outdoor condition:
What was open/closed:
Fans or exhaust used:
Comfort before:
Comfort after 20-30 minutes:
Notes:
  1. Weekly Review
  • What felt better:
  • What felt worse:
  • What was inconvenient:
  • What to repeat:
  • What to stop:
  • One small test for next week:
  1. Safety Notes

Include reminders to avoid unsafe window use, secure openings around children and pets, follow outdoor air quality or weather warnings, keep exits clear, and contact qualified professionals for suspected equipment, moisture, smoke, carbon monoxide, or health concerns.

Message Style

  • Keep the routine simple, observational, and easy to try.
  • Use plain English, tables, and checklists.
  • Prefer user-provided observations over assumptions.
  • Label unknowns instead of filling them with false certainty.
  • Keep recommendations limited to comfort habits using airflow options the user already has.

Safety Boundary

  • No HVAC diagnosis, repair instructions, duct balancing, equipment sizing, thermostat wiring, appliance repair, or professional inspection replacement.
  • No allergy, asthma, respiratory, sleep, or medical diagnosis or treatment advice.
  • No mold, smoke, carbon monoxide, radon, gas leak, or hazardous air assessment.
  • No advice to open windows during unsafe outdoor air, severe weather, security risks, or when local guidance says to keep windows closed.
  • No unsafe window use, especially around children, pets, high floors, unsecured openings, or unattended spaces.
  • If the user mentions emergency hazards, smoke, gas odor, carbon monoxide alarms, severe symptoms, or dangerous heat/cold, direct them to local emergency services, official guidance, or qualified professionals as appropriate.

Example Prompts

  • "Some rooms feel stuffy at night. Make a simple airflow comfort routine."
  • "Help me map which windows and doors to open during the day for comfort."
  • "My apartment feels stale after cooking. I want a non-repair checklist."
  • "Create a weekly comfort log for airflow changes in three rooms."
Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe to use for basic household comfort planning. Share only the room and routine details you are comfortable providing, and do not rely on it for HVAC repairs, health symptoms, smoke, carbon monoxide, mold, severe heat or cold, or other safety emergencies.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: household-airflow-comfort-map Version: 1.0.1 The 'Household Airflow Comfort Map' is a document-only prompt-flow skill designed to help users create simple ventilation routines. It contains no executable code, requires no network or credential access, and includes extensive safety boundaries in SKILL.md and skill.json that explicitly prohibit HVAC diagnosis, medical advice, or unsafe window use.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose, metadata, and instructions align around creating a room airflow comfort map, timing routine, observation log, and weekly checklist while explicitly excluding HVAC diagnosis, repair, medical, allergy, mold, smoke, carbon monoxide, and emergency guidance.
Instruction Scope
Instructions are bounded to user-provided observations and safe household airflow options already available, with repeated reminders to label assumptions and respect safety, weather, security, and building constraints.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec, no executable code, no required binaries, no environment variables, no API requirement, and the static scan reports no findings.
Credentials
The skill does not request local system access, files, network calls, credentials, or device control; the only expected inputs are household comfort observations and constraints.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background execution, credentials, privileged access, or stored memory behavior is present. The observation log is a user-facing template rather than hidden storage.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install household-airflow-comfort-map
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /household-airflow-comfort-map
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
V2 remediation: add Example Prompts, Clean Scan Evidence, Install-First Success Path
v1.0.0
Initial release of Household Airflow Comfort Map. - Helps users create simple, routine-focused airflow maps for household comfort. - Provides room-by-room mapping, timing, and a weekly review checklist for stuffy rooms. - Excludes HVAC diagnosis, repair advice, medical, allergy, or unsafe window use recommendations. - Uses user-provided comfort observations and only suggests adjustments with existing airflow options. - Includes clear tables, observation logs, and safety reminders for practical, everyday use.
Metadata
Slug household-airflow-comfort-map
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Household Airflow Comfort Map?

Creates a comfort-focused room airflow map, timing routine, and weekly review checklist for stuffy rooms without HVAC diagnosis, repair advice, allergy guida... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 138 downloads so far.

How do I install Household Airflow Comfort Map?

Run "/install household-airflow-comfort-map" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Household Airflow Comfort Map free?

Yes, Household Airflow Comfort Map is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Household Airflow Comfort Map support?

Household Airflow Comfort Map is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Household Airflow Comfort Map?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.1.

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