Minimal Home Air Purifiers

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The Everyday Air Combines Heating, Cooling, and Purification

Copenhagen-based cleantech startup Everyday has partnered with BIG to create Air, a minimalist home climate system that combines air purification, heating, and cooling in a single product. Designed to integrate more naturally into residential interiors, the system replaces the utilitarian appearance of conventional climate hardware with a clean, architectural aesthetic. The wall-mounted indoor unit features a rectilinear form with magnetic exterior panels that can be customized using interchangeable oak finishes.

Control is handled through a circular interface powered by EverydayOS, the company’s home intelligence platform that learns user routines and preferences over time. Alongside the indoor unit, the system includes a separate outdoor component housed within a compact black enclosure. Air debuted during 3 Days of Design in Copenhagen, where it was presented as a more integrated approach to managing indoor comfort and air quality.

Trend Themes

  1. Architectural Climate Systems — Home climate products are shifting from mechanical fixtures into design-integrated objects, creating space for premium systems that merge comfort, air quality, and interior aesthetics.
  2. Adaptive Home Intelligence — Learning-based interfaces are making residential environments more responsive to routines and preferences, positioning ambient automation as a differentiator in everyday comfort management.
  3. Customizable Wellness Hardware — Interchangeable finishes and modular exterior panels are bringing personalization to health-focused home devices, expanding their appeal beyond utility into lifestyle and decor markets.

Industry Implications

  1. Smart Home — Connected climate platforms are broadening the smart home category by combining sensing, automation, and environmental control within products designed for daily residential use.
  2. HVAC — The convergence of heating, cooling, and purification is reshaping HVAC expectations around compact footprints, cleaner interfaces, and multifunctional indoor air systems.
  3. Interior Design — Minimalist air management hardware is becoming relevant to interior design as homeowners seek technology that complements architectural spaces rather than interrupting them.

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