Operation Theatres (OT) are among the most technically demanding spaces in any building. Every MEP system inside an OT must meet strict international standards to protect patient safety, prevent surgical site infections, and ensure uninterrupted power supply during critical procedures.
As an MEP engineer or facilities manager working on hospital projects, understanding OT requirements is essential — whether you are designing a new facility, commissioning systems, or maintaining an existing hospital.
This complete guide covers all MEP disciplines for Operation Theatre environments — HVAC, electrical, plumbing, and medical gas systems — with reference to international standards including ASHRAE 170, HTM 03-01, NFPA 99, and ISO 14644.
Why OT MEP Design is Different from Standard Buildings
Standard commercial buildings focus on comfort. Operation Theatres focus on patient survival.
The consequences of MEP failure in an OT include:
- Surgical site infections caused by contaminated air
- Patient death due to power failure during surgery
- Explosion risk from anaesthetic gases
- Cross-contamination between OT and adjacent areas
- Equipment malfunction due to poor power quality
This is why every MEP system in an OT is designed with redundancy, strict standards compliance, and continuous monitoring.
HVAC Requirements for Operation Theatres
HVAC is the most critical MEP system in an OT. The air distribution system controls infection risk, temperature, humidity, and room pressure — all of which directly impact patient outcomes.
OT Room Classification
Operation Theatres are classified based on the level of air cleanliness required:
| OT Type | ISO Class | Air Changes (ACH) | Application |
| General Surgery OT | ISO Class 7 | 20 ACH minimum | General procedures |
| Orthopaedic / Implant OT | ISO Class 5 | 300-500 ACH (UCV) | Joint replacement, implants |
| Cardiac / Neurosurgery OT | ISO Class 6 | 25-30 ACH | High-risk procedures |
| Minor OT / Procedure Room | ISO Class 8 | 15 ACH minimum | Minor procedures |
ASHRAE 170 and HTM 03-01 Requirements
The two main standards governing OT HVAC design are:
ASHRAE 170 (USA and International Reference):
- Minimum 20 air changes per hour total
- Minimum 4 air changes per hour of outside fresh air
- Supply air from ceiling, exhaust at low level
- Temperature range: 17°C to 22°C (62°F to 81°F)
- Relative humidity: 20% to 60%
- Positive pressure relative to adjacent spaces
HTM 03-01 (UK NHS Standard):
- Minimum 20 ACH for general OT
- Plenum ceiling supply for conventional flow systems
- Ultra Clean Ventilation (UCV) for orthopaedic procedures
- Full fresh air system — no recirculation within the OT room
- HEPA filtration at terminal level (H14 minimum)
Air Distribution — Conventional Flow vs Ultra Clean Ventilation
Conventional Flow System:
- Supply air distributed through HEPA filtered ceiling diffusers
- Exhaust grilles at low level on opposite walls
- Suitable for general surgery OT
- Achieves ISO Class 7 conditions
Ultra Clean Ventilation (UCV) System:
- Large laminar flow canopy over the operating table (minimum 2.8m x 2.8m)
- Unidirectional downward airflow at 0.3 to 0.45 m/s velocity
- Achieves ISO Class 5 conditions directly over the surgical site
- Required for orthopaedic implant surgery per HTM 03-01
- Surrounding area maintained at ISO Class 7
OT Air Handling Unit (AHU) Design Requirements
Filtration stages:
- Pre-filter: G4 (coarse filtration)
- Medium filter: F7 or F9 (fine filtration)
- Terminal HEPA filter: H13 or H14 (at ceiling level)
Other AHU components:
- Cooling coil with chilled water (6 degrees C / 12 degrees C typical)
- Heating coil (LTHW or electric)
- Humidifier (steam type recommended for hygiene)
- Variable speed fans for pressure control
- 100% fresh air handling — no return air recirculation inside OT room
- Dual fan arrangement (duty/standby) for 100% redundancy
Temperature and Humidity Control
| Parameter | Requirement | Standard |
| Temperature | 17 degrees C to 22 degrees C | ASHRAE 170 |
| Relative Humidity | 20% to 60% | ASHRAE 170 |
| Temperature Accuracy | +/- 1 degree C | HTM 03-01 |
| Humidity Accuracy | +/- 5% RH | HTM 03-01 |
Room Pressure Requirements
Pressure cascading is critical in OT environments to prevent contaminated air from entering the sterile zone.
Typical OT pressure cascade:
OT Room (+25 Pa) → Scrub/Preparation Room (+10 Pa) → Clean Corridor (0 Pa) → General Area (negative)
- OT room must maintain positive pressure relative to ALL adjacent areas
- Minimum pressure differential: 8 Pa per ASHRAE 170, 25 Pa per HTM 03-01
- Pressure must be monitored continuously with visual and audible alarms
- Door pressure differential gauges installed at OT entrance
HVAC Monitoring and Controls
OT HVAC systems must include:
- BMS (Building Management System) integration
- Continuous monitoring of temperature, humidity and pressure
- Alarm systems for out-of-range conditions
- Particle counters for air cleanliness validation
- Standby fan auto-changeover
- Filter pressure drop monitoring
Electrical Requirements for Operation Theatres
Electrical systems in OTs must provide uninterrupted, clean, and safe power under all circumstances.
Power Supply System Architecture
A typical OT electrical supply system includes three levels of power supply:
Level 1 — Normal Supply:
- Main utility power from hospital LV switchboard
- Feeds non-critical loads including lighting circuits and general power
Level 2 — Essential Supply (Generator Backed):
- Automatic changeover to generator within 15 seconds per NFPA 99
- Feeds all OT equipment, ventilation and critical lighting
- Generator must be sized for 100% OT load plus 25% spare capacity
Level 3 — UPS Supply:
- Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) for immediate backup
- Zero transfer time — less than 20 milliseconds
- Feeds life-critical equipment: anaesthesia machines, patient monitoring, surgical lights
- Minimum UPS autonomy: 30 minutes per HTM 06-01
Isolated Power System (IT System)
The IT system (Isolated Terra — Medical IT system) is mandatory in OT environments per IEC 60364-7-710 and HTM 06-01.
Why IT system is used:
- In a standard TN system, a single earth fault causes an immediate trip — dangerous during surgery
- In an IT system, the first earth fault raises an alarm but does NOT cut power
- Surgery can continue safely while the fault is investigated
- Only a second earth fault causes disconnection
IT system components:
- Isolation transformer (medical grade)
- Insulation monitoring device (IMD)
- Local equipment monitor (LEM) panel mounted in OT
- Line isolation monitor (LIM) with visual and audible alarm
OT Lighting Requirements
| Light Type | Requirement | Standard |
| General OT Lighting | 1000 lux minimum | HTM 06-01 |
| Surgical Light (Task) | 40,000 to 160,000 lux | EN 60601 |
| Examination Lighting | 1000 lux | HTM 06-01 |
| Emergency Lighting | 50% of normal within 5 seconds | BS 5266 |
| Night/Standby Lighting | Minimum 200 lux | HTM 06-01 |
Surgical lights must be:
- Shadow-free with multiple satellite heads
- Colour rendering index (CRI) greater than 85
- Colour temperature: 3,500K to 6,700K adjustable
- UPS backed with zero transfer time
- Ceiling mounted on motorised pendant systems
Electrical Outlets and Panel Requirements
OT electrical outlets:
- Minimum 24 electrical outlets per OT per HTM 06-01
- All outlets on medical grade pendants or boom arms
- Mix of normal supply and UPS supply outlets — clearly colour coded
- All outlets rated IP44 minimum (splash proof)
- No standard 13A sockets — hospital grade only
OT electrical panel (distribution board):
- Dedicated DB for each OT
- Separate MCBs for lighting, power and UPS circuits
- RCCB protection on all circuits (30mA)
- IT system transformer in dedicated enclosure
- Clear labelling and single line diagram posted inside panel door
Earthing and Bonding
- All metallic items in OT must be bonded to supplementary equipotential bonding system
- Patient environment zone bonding required within 2.5m of patient
- Bonding conductor minimum 4mm2 copper
- Earth continuity tested annually
Plumbing and Medical Gas Systems
Scrub Sinks
- Minimum 2 scrub sinks per OT per HTM 00
- Elbow or sensor-operated taps — no hand-operated controls
- Hot and cold water supply with thermostatic mixing valve (TMV3 rated)
- Water temperature at outlet: 41 degrees C maximum for infection control
- Separate drainage — not connected to general building drainage
Medical Gas Systems
Medical gases are the most critical utility in an OT — failure can be immediately fatal.
Gases required in OT:
| Gas | Colour Code | Pressure | Use |
| Medical Oxygen (O2) | White | 4 bar | Patient breathing, anaesthesia |
| Medical Air | Black + White | 4 bar | Ventilators, anaesthesia |
| Nitrous Oxide (N2O) | Blue | 4 bar | Anaesthetic agent |
| Surgical Air | Black + White | 7 bar | Surgical power tools |
| Medical Vacuum (AGSS) | Yellow | Vacuum | Anaesthetic gas scavenging |
| Carbon Dioxide (CO2) | Grey | 4 bar | Laparoscopic surgery |
Medical gas outlet requirements per OT per HTM 02-01:
- Medical oxygen: minimum 3 outlets
- Medical air 4 bar: minimum 2 outlets
- Surgical air 7 bar: minimum 2 outlets
- Nitrous oxide: minimum 2 outlets
- Medical vacuum / AGSS: minimum 4 outlets
- CO2: minimum 1 outlet
AGSS — Anaesthetic Gas Scavenging System
The AGSS removes waste anaesthetic gases from the OT environment and prevents chronic exposure to anaesthetic agents by OT staff.
- Dedicated vacuum plant — not connected to general medical vacuum
- Active AGSS system required for all modern OT suites
- Full validation per HTM 02-01 Part C required before commissioning
OT Environmental Validation and Commissioning
Before any OT is handed over for clinical use, all MEP systems must be fully validated and documented.
HVAC Validation Tests
- Air volume measurement — Testing, Adjusting and Balancing (TAB)
- Room pressure differential test
- Temperature uniformity test
- Humidity control test
- Particle count test per ISO 14644-1
- Recovery test — time to recover from contamination
- Filter integrity test (DOP/PAO test for HEPA filters)
- Smoke pattern test for airflow visualisation
Electrical Validation Tests
- IT system insulation resistance test
- Earth continuity test
- UPS changeover time test
- Generator load test and auto transfer test
- Illuminance measurement — lux levels at all points
- Power quality measurement — harmonics and voltage stability
Medical Gas Validation Tests
- Pressure and flow tests at each outlet
- Cross-connection test — critical to confirm correct gas at each outlet
- Purity test for each gas
- Alarm test for all zone valves and monitoring panels
- Pipeline labelling verification
Key Standards Reference for OT MEP Design
| Standard | Scope | Region |
| ASHRAE 170 | Ventilation of Health Care Facilities | USA / International |
| HTM 03-01 | Heating and Ventilation in Healthcare | UK NHS |
| HTM 06-01 | Electrical Services in Healthcare | UK NHS |
| HTM 02-01 | Medical Gas Pipeline Systems | UK NHS |
| HTM 04-01 | Water Systems in Healthcare | UK NHS |
| NFPA 99 | Health Care Facilities Code | USA |
| IEC 60364-7-710 | Electrical Installations in Medical Locations | International |
| ISO 14644-1 | Cleanroom Classification | International |
| EN ISO 7396 | Medical Gas Pipeline Systems | Europe |
OT MEP Design Summary Checklist
HVAC:
- Dedicated 100% fresh air AHU with G4/F9/H14 filtration
- Minimum 20 ACH (general OT), UCV for orthopaedic OT
- Temperature 17-22 degrees C, Humidity 20-60% RH
- Positive pressure +25 Pa minimum
- BMS monitoring with alarms
- Duty/standby fan arrangement
Electrical:
- IT isolated power system per IEC 60364-7-710
- UPS with minimum 30 minutes autonomy
- Generator with 15-second auto transfer
- Minimum 24 outlets per OT on pendants
- 1000 lux general lighting, UPS backed surgical lights
- Full supplementary equipotential bonding
Medical Gases:
- All 6 gases provided with correct outlet numbers per HTM 02-01
- Zone valve boxes outside each OT
- AGSS system for anaesthetic gas disposal
- Full validation and commissioning documentation
Frequently Asked Questions
How many air changes per hour does an operation theatre need?
A general surgery OT requires a minimum of 20 air changes per hour (ACH) per ASHRAE 170. Orthopaedic and implant OTs using Ultra Clean Ventilation (UCV) systems achieve 300 to 500 ACH over the surgical site to achieve ISO Class 5 conditions.
What is the required room pressure in an operation theatre?
The OT must maintain positive pressure of at least 8 Pa above adjacent areas per ASHRAE 170, or 25 Pa per HTM 03-01. This prevents contaminated air from entering the sterile environment through door gaps.
Why is an IT system used in operating theatres?
The IT (Isolated Terra) system allows surgery to continue safely after the first earth fault without disconnecting power. In a standard TN system, a single fault causes immediate trip which is unacceptable during surgery.
What HEPA filter grade is required in an OT?
Terminal HEPA filters of H13 or H14 grade are required at ceiling level in OT supply air systems. H14 filters achieve 99.995% filtration efficiency for particles 0.3 microns and above.
Which medical gases are required in an operating theatre?
A standard OT requires medical oxygen, medical air at 4 bar, surgical air at 7 bar, nitrous oxide, medical vacuum/AGSS, and carbon dioxide for laparoscopic procedures — all per HTM 02-01.
