From a faucet handle to a door pull and then a phone screen, microscopic travelers follow us through a building quicker than we realize. Interrupting even one of those steps with a sensor-based interaction reduces opportunities for transfer, supporting better hygiene without adding friction, lectures, or constant reminders that fatigue people.
Handles, push plates, flush levers, and soap pumps concentrate repeated contact within short time windows. By transforming those actions into non-contact gestures, we dilute the cumulative exposure shared across visitors. Fewer shared touchpoints mean fewer moments to pass microbes along, reinforcing cleaning programs rather than forcing them to work alone.
All Rights Reserved.