The German practice of lüften, airing out your house, is becoming popular in the U.S. NPR's Scott Simon speaks to Annette Baran from the Goethe Institute, and her husband Robert, about embracing ...
The process comes from a German practice called "lüften," which means "airing out," according to Time. German homes typically ...
The German trend for airing your house even in the depths of winter has become a TikTok trend, but does it actually make a home healthier?
What Is House Burping: A simple winter habit from Germany is taking over the internet, and it’s not as strange as it sounds.
As a deep freeze envelops a good chunk of the country, “house burping,” in which people open the windows of their homes to let in fresh air — even in the dead of winter — has grown in popularity. It’s ...
It’s called “house burping,” and it involves briefly opening windows, even in the middle of winter, to let fresh air into ...
House burping, a term Americans use for the German practice of lüften, involves opening windows once or twice a day to air ...
A simple German practice, 'house burping' or Lüften, is gaining global traction. This involves briefly opening windows wide multiple times daily to refresh indoor air, combatting mould, pollutants, ...
A quick house burping freshens my home’s air and lowers the risk of mold, and it only takes five minutes.
The origins of this practice go way back: "lüften" is the German tradition of periodically opening the windows and doors of your house to cross-ventilate and circulate fresh air through your living ...
The practice of airing homes by opening doors and windows for short periods during the day, helps to replace stale, polluted ...
In the last few weeks, an unfamiliar German term may have surfaced on your social media feeds. “Lüften” roughly translates to “ventilate” or “airing out” and involves just that — opening windows in ...