Deployment Principles
AIROVIA deployments are designed for public-sector execution: measurable outcomes, controlled risk, and clear governance. The deployment model supports phased investment, resilience planning, and predictable expansion based on validated performance.
- Validate performance and operating assumptions before scaling
- Reduce single-point failure risk through distributed assets
- Align rollout with procurement, regulation, and budget cycles
Pilot Phase
Pilots establish operational confidence. They provide real-world performance data, define site requirements, and validate O&M routines. Pilot results become the baseline for investment decisions and scale-up planning.
- Single or limited Air House deployment in priority locations
- Performance validation: output stability, energy use, and reliability
- Operational reporting to support oversight and stakeholder review
Scale-Up and Replication
Once validated, capacity expands through replication rather than redesign. Air Houses can be deployed as clusters to form facility-scale output, or distributed across regions to strengthen resilience and reduce dependency on constrained supply pathways.
- Clustered facilities for city-scale capacity buildout
- Distributed sites to strengthen regional resilience
- Standardized asset approach supports predictable CAPEX and procurement
Integration with Existing Infrastructure
AIROVIA is designed to complement existing water systems. Deployments can integrate with storage and distribution networks while maintaining clear operational boundaries for reporting, maintenance, and governance.
- Supplemental production during drought cycles or peak demand
- Strategic augmentation for remote and underserved areas
- Interfaces suitable for storage, distribution, and monitoring