The Salus Standard

Five non-negotiable principles that every material, every assembly, and every system in a Domus-grade home must satisfy — without exception.

A standard, not a suggestion

The Salus Standard is the benchmark against which every material that enters a Domus-grade home is evaluated. It is not a certification program, a marketing label, or a points-based green building system. It is a set of five non-negotiable performance requirements derived from a single premise: your home should protect your health, not compromise it.

Modern construction has normalized materials that fail basic health criteria — formaldehyde-off-gassing engineered wood, moisture-trapping spray foam, phthalate-releasing vinyl, chemically-treated lumber. These materials dominate not because they are best for the people living inside the home, but because they are cheapest and fastest for the people building it.

The Salus Standard rejects that trade-off. A material either passes all five principles or it does not belong in a Domus-grade home. There is no partial credit, no "lower than average chemical load," no "practically safe." The standard is binary because your family's health deserves a binary answer.

"Every material that enters a Domus Salus home must meet five criteria: naturally fire-resistant, inherently mold-resistant, pest-proof without toxins, neutral or positive indoor air quality impact, and capable of lasting generations without chemical life support."

"We do not accept materials that require chemical Band-Aids to perform. We do not accept materials that poison the air to save the builder money. We do not accept the frontier mentality that confuses code compliance with optimal health."

The Domus Salus Manifesto — On Materials
Five requirements. All five. No exceptions.
Natural Fire Resistance
Inherent Mold Resistance
Pest-Proof Without Poison
Indoor Air Quality: Zero VOC
Generational Durability

The Five Domus Principles

Expand each principle to see the full evaluation criteria, which materials fail, and what the Domus-grade alternatives are.

I of V
Natural Fire Resistance
Resistance through material composition — not chemical treatment
+

Why It Matters

Standard wood-frame construction is inherently combustible. The industry's solution — chemical fire retardants — trades fire risk for continuous chemical exposure. Halogenated flame retardants used in insulation, treated lumber, and engineered wood products are documented endocrine disruptors and probable carcinogens. The Domus Standard requires fire resistance that comes from what the material is made of, not what has been injected into it.

Frontier-Grade Fails

  • Spray foam insulation (requires chemical retardants)
  • Fire-treated lumber (retardant impregnation)
  • OSB & engineered wood (combustible, treated)
  • Synthetic insulation batts
  • Vinyl siding & PVC trim

Domus-Grade Passes

  • Mineral wool (non-combustible to 2,150°F)
  • Magnesium oxide (MgO) board
  • Natural stone & masonry
  • Steel framing & cladding
  • Fiber cement siding
  • Clay & lime plasters

Intermediate — Passes This Principle

  • JM Spider Plus blow-in fiberglass (no flame retardant additives required)
  • Knauf EcoBatt / OC PINK Next Gen batts (formaldehyde-free; no chemical retardant treatment)
Conventional home compliance with this principle
~15%
II of V
Inherent Mold Resistance
Materials that cannot feed mold — regardless of moisture events
+

Why It Matters

Moisture intrusion is not a failure scenario in construction — it is a certainty over any building's lifespan. The question is not whether moisture will find its way into your wall assembly, but whether your wall assembly feeds mold when it does. OSB, cellulose, and standard fiberglass batts are organic and nutrient-rich — ideal mold substrates. Standard gypsum drywall's vulnerability is its paper facing: gypsum itself is an inorganic mineral, but the paper facing that covers both sides is organic and is what mold colonizes. Inorganic materials with no organic facing or binders have nothing for mold to consume.

Frontier-Grade Fails

  • OSB sheathing (accelerated mold in moisture)
  • Standard gypsum drywall (paper facing feeds mold)
  • Cellulose insulation
  • Standard fiberglass batts (paper/foil facing harbors mold)
  • Engineered wood products (OSB web joists)
  • Plywood sheathing

Domus-Grade Passes

  • Mineral wool (no organic content)
  • MgO board (inorganic, mold-proof)
  • Lime plaster (actively antimicrobial)
  • Natural stone & masonry
  • Steel framing
  • Closed-pore glass insulation

Intermediate — Meaningful Upgrade

  • Fiberglass-faced gypsum board (GP DensArmor Plus, USG Glass-Mat Mold Tough) — eliminates the paper facing that feeds mold; gypsum core is an inorganic mineral and does not support microbial growth. Limitation vs. MgO is fire resistance and long-term durability, not mold performance.
  • JM Spider Plus blow-in fiberglass — no paper facing, no organic binders; passes on mold substrate criteria
Conventional home compliance with this principle
~10%
III of V
Pest-Proof Without Poison
Structural pest resistance through material selection — never chemical injection
+

Why It Matters

Pressure-treated lumber uses copper compounds and biocides injected under pressure to resist rot and insects. These chemicals leach continuously — into soil, into air, into crawl spaces where vapors migrate upward into living spaces. The alternative is not chemical resistance, but structural design that uses materials pests cannot digest: metal, masonry, inorganic composites, and naturally rot-resistant species where appropriate.

Frontier-Grade Fails

  • ACQ pressure-treated lumber (copper leaching)
  • Copper azole treated wood
  • Borate-treated structural wood
  • Standard softwood at ground contact
  • Engineered wood (termite-susceptible)

Domus-Grade Passes

  • Metal framing (no organic food source)
  • Masonry & concrete (inorganic)
  • Black locust, osage orange (natural resistance)
  • Teak, ipe, white oak heartwood
  • MgO board at ground contact
  • Physical pest barriers (copper mesh, metal sill)
Conventional home compliance with this principle
~20%
IV of V
Indoor Air Quality: Zero VOC Contribution
Materials that improve your air — or at minimum leave it unchanged
+

Why It Matters

The EPA documents indoor air at 2–5× worse than outdoor air in American homes. The primary driver is continuous off-gassing from building materials: formaldehyde from engineered wood adhesives, isocyanates from spray foam, phthalates from vinyl, chemical preservatives from treated lumber. In energy-efficient sealed homes, these compounds accumulate without ventilation to dilute them. Principle IV requires zero ongoing VOC contribution — not "low VOC," not "compliant VOC." Zero.

Frontier-Grade Fails

  • OSB & plywood (formaldehyde adhesive resins)
  • Spray foam (isocyanates, VOC off-gassing)
  • Vinyl flooring (phthalates)
  • Synthetic carpet (VOCs, flame retardants)
  • Pressure-treated lumber (biocide off-gassing)
  • Conventional paint & finishes

Domus-Grade Passes

  • Lime & clay plasters (VOC-negative)
  • Mineral wool insulation (zero binders)
  • Solid hardwood (unfinished or zero-VOC finish)
  • Natural linoleum (linseed oil base)
  • Stone, ceramic, porcelain tile
  • Natural mineral paints

Intermediate — Passes This Principle

  • ECOS Paints — zero-VOC across all tints including deep colors
  • PPG Copper Armor / Behr Copper Force — zero-VOC base; EPA-registered antimicrobial. Note: colorants may introduce VOCs — specify whites and light tints only
  • Sherwin-Williams SuperPaint Air Purifying — GREENGUARD Gold, passively reduces VOCs from other indoor sources
  • JM Spider Plus blow-in fiberglass — zero VOC, no formaldehyde binders
Conventional home compliance with this principle
~8%
V of V
Generational Durability
Built for centuries, not for mortgage cycles
+

Why It Matters

Frontier-grade construction is designed for 30-year lifespans — aligned with mortgage terms, not civilizational standards. Vinyl siding, asphalt shingles, OSB sheathing, and engineered lumber all carry expected replacement cycles under 30 years in real-world conditions. Domus Principle V requires materials capable of 100+ year service without replacement. Not as an aspiration — as a minimum qualification. The Romans built structures that still stand 2,000 years later. We're building homes that need major renovations before the owner's children finish school.

Frontier-Grade Fails

  • Asphalt shingles (15–25 year lifespan)
  • Vinyl siding (20–30 years)
  • OSB sheathing (degrades with moisture)
  • Engineered lumber (limited lifespan)
  • Composite decking (30 year maximum)
  • Synthetic stucco / EIFS systems

Domus-Grade Passes

  • Metal roofing (50–100+ years)
  • Clay & slate tile (100–200+ years)
  • Natural stone cladding (indefinite)
  • Brick & masonry (centuries)
  • Fiber cement siding (50+ years)
  • Solid timber (properly detailed)
Conventional home compliance with this principle
~18%

The Salus Verdict

Four verdicts. No ambiguous middle ground. A material either meets the Domus Principles — or it doesn't.

Every material evaluated by Domus Salus receives a Salus Verdict based on its performance across all five Domus Principles. The verdict is not influenced by energy performance, installed cost, or code compliance. Those are the industry's criteria. The Salus Verdict measures only what matters to the occupant: health, safety, and permanence.

A material that passes four principles but fails Principle IV — indoor air quality — does not receive a conditional pass. It is Failed. A single VOC-emitting material in a sealed home is a continuous health exposure, and that cannot be offset by strong performance elsewhere. Each principle must stand on its own.

Numeric scores for each material will be published through the Material Monday series as formal evaluations are completed under the published Salus Score Methodology. The verdicts shown here reflect the qualitative outcome of that framework.

How a verdict is determined
Any principle fails outright
→ Verdict: Failed. No exceptions.
One or more principles partially met
→ Verdict: Conditional — with stated design requirements.
All five principles met
→ Verdict: Approved for Salus-certified construction.
All five principles exceeded
→ Verdict: Preferred — first-choice Domus material.
Verdict I
Failed

Fails one or more Domus Principles outright. Active health hazard in occupied conditions. Not permitted in any Salus-certified application regardless of compensating design details.

Examples: Spray foam · OSB · Vinyl flooring · Pressure-treated lumber
Verdict II
Conditional

Partially meets one or more principles. Permitted only in defined applications with specific compensating design requirements — proper moisture management, additional fire detailing, or equivalent. Conditions are non-negotiable.

Examples: Dimensional lumber · Exterior plywood
Verdict III
Approved

Meets all five Domus Principles to the Salus Standard. Approved for use in Salus-certified construction without qualification. Minor performance gaps on non-critical sub-criteria may exist — no principle fails outright.

Examples: Clay plaster · Solid hardwood · Natural linoleum
Verdict IV
Preferred

Exceeds all five Domus Principles. No chemical additives, no organic mold substrate, no combustibility concerns, no VOC emissions. First-choice material for Salus-certified construction. The gold standard for each category.

Examples: Mineral wool · MgO board · Lime plaster · Natural stone
01 Data Compilation

Safety data sheets, third-party test results, regulatory classifications, and peer-reviewed literature are gathered for the material.

02 Five-Principle Evaluation

Each principle is evaluated independently. A single outright failure produces a Failed verdict — no averaging across principles.

03 IAQ Data Review

VOC emission data (CDPH 01350, GREENGUARD, or equivalent) reviewed for Principle IV. Formaldehyde, isocyanates, and phthalates trigger automatic failure.

04 Conditions Defined

If Conditional, the specific design requirements that must accompany use are stated. These are published alongside the verdict and are non-negotiable.

05 Verdict Published

Final verdict, principle-by-principle breakdown, primary data sources, and any conditions published to the material database.

Salus Verdicts

A selection of commonly specified residential materials evaluated against all five Domus Principles. Formal Salus Scores are published through the Material Monday series as each evaluation is completed — the verdicts here reflect the qualitative outcome of that framework.

Material Verdict Principles (I–V) Primary Concern / Note
Spray Polyurethane FoamInsulation ✕ Failed
IIIIIIIVV
Isocyanate off-gassing, VOC emission, vapor trap, requires chemical flame retardants
Mineral WoolInsulation ★ Preferred
IIIIIIIVV
None. Non-combustible to 2,150°F, inorganic, zero VOC, no binders in most formulations
Fiberglass BattsInsulation ✕ Failed
IIIIIIIVV
Paper or foil facing feeds mold; off-gassing from binder resins; loses R-value when compressed
OSB SheathingSheathing ✕ Failed
IIIIIIIVV
Formaldehyde adhesive resins, mold substrate, moisture absorption accelerates off-gassing
MgO BoardSheathing ★ Preferred
IIIIIIIVV
None. Inorganic, mold-proof, naturally fire-resistant, zero formaldehyde, 50+ year service life
Plywood (Exterior)Sheathing ◐ Conditional
IIIIIIIVV
Lower formaldehyde than OSB (PF resins), but still combustible and mold-susceptible without a complete drainage plane and ventilation gap
Standard Gypsum DrywallInterior Finish ✕ Failed
IIIIIIIVV
Paper facing feeds mold — gypsum itself is an inorganic mineral, but the organic paper covering both faces is the mold substrate. Remove the paper, remove the problem. Fails Principle II due to facing, not core material.
Lime PlasterInterior Finish ★ Preferred
IIIIIIIVV
None. Actively antimicrobial pH, vapor-regulating, inherently mold-resistant, improves indoor air quality
Clay PlasterInterior Finish ✓ Approved
IIIIIIIVV
Not non-combustible (Principle I partial, not a fail); excellent moisture-buffering, zero VOC, naturally hypoallergenic
Vinyl Plank / LVPFlooring ✕ Failed
IIIIIIIVV
Phthalate plasticizers (endocrine disruptors), VOC off-gassing increases with heat, halogenated flame retardant additives — Principle IV hard fail
Solid HardwoodFlooring ✓ Approved
IIIIIIIVV
Finish-dependent for IAQ — specify zero-VOC finish. Partial on fire and mold (not fails); solid wood outperforms engineered on both
Natural LinoleumFlooring ✓ Approved
IIIIIIIVV
Linseed oil, cork, wood flour base — naturally antimicrobial, zero synthetic chemicals, 40+ year service life
Pressure-Treated LumberFraming ✕ Failed
IIIIIIIVV
ACQ/copper azole off-gassing; chemical biocides are the primary pest mechanism (Principle III hard fail); four principles fail outright
Dimensional Lumber (Dry)Framing ◐ Conditional
IIIIIIIVV
Combustible (Principle I fail); pest-susceptible without treatment (Principle III fail). Conditional approval requires fire-rated assembly detailing and physical pest exclusion — no chemical treatments permitted
JM Spider Plus (Blow-In Fiberglass)Insulation ✓ Approved
IIIIIIIVV
Formaldehyde-free, no flame retardant additives, no paper facing. Fiberglass fiber inhalation risk during installation only — not an occupant exposure concern once enclosed. Lower durability score than mineral wool.
Fiberglass-Faced Gypsum BoardInterior Finish ◐ Conditional
IIIIIIIVV
GP DensArmor Plus / USG Glass-Mat Mold Tough. Eliminates paper mold substrate (ASTM D3273 score: 10/10); gypsum core is an inorganic mineral and does not support microbial growth. Limitation vs. MgO: lower fire resistance and shorter service life — not a mold concern. Significant upgrade over standard drywall.
PPG Copper Armor / Behr Copper ForceInterior Finish ◐ Conditional
IIIIIIIVV
EPA-registered copper ion antimicrobial, zero-VOC base, kills 99.9% of bacteria/viruses within 2 hours. Conditional: colorants may introduce VOCs — whites and light tints only. Surface treatment only; not a substitute for moisture management upstream.
ECOS PaintsInterior Finish ✓ Approved
IIIIIIIVV
Zero-VOC across all tints including deep colors — unlike most zero-VOC paints that reintroduce VOCs through colorants. Air-purifying line available. Premium price; limited retail availability.
Lunos e² Decentralized ERVVentilation ✓ Approved
IIIIIIIVV
Genuine heat recovery, no ductwork required — practical for retrofits and additions where central HRV/ERV is not feasible. Higher per-CFM cost than central system; whole-house coverage requires multiple paired units.
Salus Verdicts represent qualitative evaluations based on available safety data, third-party testing, regulatory classifications, and building science research. Verdicts apply to standard product formulations — specific products may vary. Numeric Salus Scores are published through the Material Monday series as formal evaluations are completed under the published methodology. Submit a material for evaluation via #SalusCheckRequest.

Frontier-Grade vs. Domus-Grade

The same home. The same energy code. Two completely different material philosophies — and two completely different health outcomes.

Frontier-Grade Construction
vs
Domus-Grade Construction
Insulation
Closed-cell spray foam — seals and insulates in one product, traps VOCs and isocyanates, requires chemical flame retardants
Insulation
Insulation
Mineral wool — vapor-open, non-combustible to 2,150°F, zero VOC, no binders, separated from dedicated air barrier
Also: JM Spider Plus (blow-in fiberglass) or Knauf EcoBatt batts — formaldehyde-free, no flame retardant additives, widely available intermediate options
Air Barrier
Spray foam serves as combined insulator and air barrier — functions are inseparable, material properties non-negotiable
Air Barrier
Air Barrier
Dedicated membrane or taped rigid board — independent function allows any healthy insulation material without performance compromise
Sheathing
OSB — formaldehyde-bonded wood strands, mold substrate, degrades on moisture contact, accelerates off-gassing when wet
Sheathing
Sheathing
MgO board — inorganic, mold-proof, zero formaldehyde, fire-resistant, taped at seams for airtightness equal to OSB + wrap
Interior Walls
Gypsum drywall — paper facing feeds mold in moisture events; becomes microbial breeding ground by the time damage is visible
Interior Walls
Interior Walls
Lime plaster — actively antimicrobial, vapor-regulating, inherently mold-resistant, improves indoor air quality, lasts centuries
Also: Fiberglass-faced gypsum board (GP DensArmor Plus / USG Glass-Mat Mold Tough) — eliminates paper mold substrate, installs like standard drywall. Finish with zero-VOC paint; PPG Copper Armor adds EPA-registered antimicrobial protection.
Ventilation
Bath fans + code-minimum exhaust — unbalanced pressure, undersized for occupancy, rarely commissioned to verify actual flow
Ventilation
Ventilation
Balanced ERV or HRV — sized for actual occupancy, MERV-13 filtration, 70–90% energy recovery, continuously fresh indoor air
Flooring
Vinyl plank (LVP) — phthalate plasticizers, VOC off-gassing increases with heat, flame retardant additives, 15–20 year lifespan
Flooring
Flooring
Solid hardwood, natural linoleum, stone, or ceramic — zero synthetic chemicals, 50–100+ year service life, refinishable
Frontier-Grade Result
Sealed chemical environment
Energy-efficient home, 2–5× worse indoor air than outside, continuous formaldehyde and VOC exposure, high mold risk
vs
Domus-Grade Result
Tight and healthy
Equivalent or superior energy performance, continuously fresh indoor air, inherent mold resistance, zero chemical off-gassing

Demand the Salus Standard

The Salus Standard is not a certification that requires a builder's license or an architect's stamp. It is a set of questions any homeowner or homebuyer can ask — and any builder who cannot answer them does not know enough about what they are building.

Knowledge is the first form of demand. When you know what OSB is, what formaldehyde means for your indoor air, what an ERV does and why its absence matters in a sealed home — you become the buyer that builders cannot ignore.

The market for Domus-grade construction will be built from the bottom up, by buyers who refuse to accept frontier-grade materials dressed in granite countertops. The Salus Standard gives you the vocabulary and the framework to refuse.

Five Questions to Ask Every Builder
1
On Insulation "What is your insulation strategy, and is it separate from your air barrier strategy? What materials are you specifying, and why?"
2
On Sheathing & Engineered Wood "What are the formaldehyde emission classifications of every engineered wood product in this home's structure?"
3
On Ventilation "How was the mechanical ventilation flow rate calculated? Is it an HRV or ERV? Was that selection based on climate zone? Will it be commissioned after installation?"
4
On Moisture Management "What happens to this wall assembly when moisture gets in — and what is your drainage plane strategy to let it dry?"
5
On Materials Documentation "Can you provide VOC emission certifications and health data sheets for the flooring, insulation, and interior finish products?"

You know the Standard.
Now build to it.

Get the Domus Salus Material Guide — a complete reference to Salus-certified materials, Domus-grade alternatives to standard products, and the questions to ask before signing any construction contract.

Get the Material Guide Review the Problem →
  • The complete Salus Verdict database — 50+ materials evaluated across all five principles
  • Domus-grade material specifications ready to hand to your contractor
  • The five questions that will immediately reveal a builder's health literacy
  • Ventilation sizing guide — how to calculate ERV/HRV requirements for your home
  • Lifecycle cost analysis — Domus-grade vs. frontier-grade over 30 years
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