A LinkedIn post from Airthings highlights the deployment of its fully wireless indoor air quality monitoring system at the historic Château des ducs de Bretagne in Nantes. The installation is described as addressing radon and broader air quality concerns in a granite-built monument that hosts 80 staff and 1.4 million annual visitors each year.
Claim 55% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
According to the post, the project enabled “zero-impact” installation with no drilling into heritage walls, along with real-time data logging in offices and public museum areas. The post also notes that custom dashboards and QR codes allow staff to monitor their own environment, suggesting a user-centric approach that may strengthen product stickiness and cross-site scalability.
For investors, the use case points to Airthings’ ability to serve complex heritage and public-infrastructure environments, where wired retrofits are impractical or restricted. This may expand the addressable market beyond conventional commercial buildings, supporting demand in segments such as museums, historic sites, and public institutions with heightened safety and compliance requirements.
The emphasis on radon risk management and continuous air-quality monitoring aligns with tightening health and building standards in Europe and other regions. If replicated across similar venues, this type of deployment could contribute to recurring revenue from hardware, software subscriptions, and data services, potentially enhancing the company’s competitive positioning in professional IAQ solutions.

