Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Room | Area | Unit | Usage | People | Pets | Plants | Humidity | Dust | Days/Week | Min/Day |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Greenhouse Room | 180 | sqft | High | 1 | 0 | 35 | High | High | 4 | 25 |
| Potting Shed | 120 | sqft | Medium | 2 | 1 | 18 | Normal | Normal | 3 | 20 |
| Indoor Plant Corner | 25 | sqm | Low | 1 | 0 | 12 | Normal | Low | 2 | 15 |
Formula Used
This calculator uses a Cleaning Load Score to set task frequency and time.
- Cleaning Load Score = (Area/150) × Usage × Humidity × Dust × Allergy × Floor + 0.15×Occupants + 0.35×Pets + 0.03×Plants (capped).
- Frequencies are mapped from score thresholds to daily/weekly/biweekly/monthly.
- Schedule spreads tasks across your chosen cleaning days and balances minutes/day.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your room name and size, then choose the floor type.
- Select usage, humidity, and dust levels for your space.
- Add people, pets, and plant count for realistic load.
- Set cleaning days and minutes available per day.
- Press Submit to see the plan above the form.
- Use Download buttons to save CSV or PDF.
Cleaning Load Score and why it matters
Indoor garden rooms collect soil, pollen, splashes, and leaf litter. The calculator converts your conditions into a Cleaning Load Score that reflects traffic, moisture, dust, and plant volume. A higher score increases task frequency so surfaces stay safer for seedlings, tools, and stored amendments. It also helps you compare spaces, such as a potting shed versus a humid grow corner.
Time budgeting for consistent results
Most routines fail when a single day becomes too heavy. Minutes Available per Day acts as a cap, and the schedule engine spreads work across your selected cleaning days. Larger rooms scale time upward, while smaller zones emphasize quick resets that prevent clutter from becoming a weekend-only problem. If your week is busy reduce daily minutes and increase cleaning days to keep tasks short.
Humidity, mold prevention, and airflow
High humidity increases the risk of algae on floors and mold around drains, trays, and corners. Weekly drain checks and damp-cleaning help reduce spores, odors, and slippery surfaces. When humidity is normal or low, the plan shifts effort toward dusting vents, shelving, and light fixtures. Pair the schedule with airflow, clean filters, and dry mats near watering areas.
Plant count, debris handling, and sanitation
Plants shed leaves, drop potting mix, and attract fine dust that clings to sticky residues. More plants raise the debris-removal cadence and add time for sorting compostables. Sanitize high-touch handles and switches on a steady rhythm to limit cross-contamination between potting tasks and household areas. For pests, remove dead foliage promptly and wipe bench edges where eggs can hide.
Exported schedules for teams and reminders
CSV export helps track responsibility in shared sheds, studios, or greenhouse rooms. PDF export is useful for printing near the sink or tool wall. When you adjust inputs seasonally, compare weekly totals to ensure the routine stays realistic while still protecting plants, tools, and floors. Store printed plans in a sleeve so you can tick off tasks with a marker.
FAQs
1) What does the Cleaning Load Score represent?
It summarizes room size, usage, floor type, humidity, dust, allergies, people, pets, and plant count. The score maps to task frequency and estimated time so the schedule matches real conditions.
2) Why do I see optional tasks on some days?
Low-frequency items, like monthly or every-six-weeks tasks, are placed as optional so your weekly plan stays stable. Complete them when time allows, or rotate them through different weeks.
3) How do I reduce the weekly total minutes?
Lower the minutes cap, reduce cleaning days, or simplify the space: store soil in sealed bins, add entry mats, and consolidate tools. The calculator will rebalance tasks across fewer minutes.
4) Which floor type should I choose for mixed surfaces?
Pick the surface that dominates the walking path. If half the area is carpet or rugs, choose Carpet; if most traffic is on tile or concrete, choose that option for more accurate sweeping and mopping time.
5) How often should I update the inputs?
Update when seasons change, plant count shifts, or humidity increases. Many growers refresh the plan monthly, and after repotting periods, to keep debris and moisture risks aligned with the schedule.
6) Can I share the output with someone else?
Yes. Use CSV for shared task lists and tracking, and PDF for printing. If multiple people clean, assign days or tasks per person and keep the same inputs for consistent expectations.