Ronda invests eleven thousand euros in air conditioning the Nursing School

Published on June 03, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The Ronda City Council has approved a budget of nearly 11,000 euros to renovate the air conditioning system of the Virgen de la Paz University School of Nursing. The objective is to guarantee a stable and comfortable environment for students and teaching staff. This measure represents a step forward in improving the facilities of a key center for training future healthcare professionals in the region.

modern air conditioning units being installed on the roof of a university nursing school building, two technicians in blue uniforms connecting copper refrigerant pipes to a central HVAC system, one worker using a digital manifold gauge while the other adjusts a wall-mounted thermostat inside a bright classroom, students in white lab coats observing through a glass door, sunlight casting sharp shadows on polished concrete floor, technical engineering visualization, photorealistic architectural render, clean metallic ducts and ventilation grilles, cool blue and warm orange lighting contrast, ultra-detailed mechanical components, cinematic wide-angle shot

Technical efficiency for an optimal learning environment 🌡️

The investment will focus on updating the heating and cooling equipment, likely with heat pump systems or high energy efficiency air conditioners. The new equipment is expected to regulate temperature stably in classrooms and laboratories, reducing thermal peaks that affect concentration. The action could also include improvements to insulation or the installation of smart thermostats, optimizing electricity consumption and extending the system's lifespan.

Goodbye to coats in February and fans in May 😅

Finally, nursing students will be able to focus on learning to take blood pressure without their fingers trembling from cold or melting during resuscitation practice. Of course, we'll have to see if the new system can withstand the heating at maximum when some professor decides that 22 degrees is a temperature for wimps. Meanwhile, future nurses can say goodbye to electric blankets in the classroom and to the cardboard advertising fans from the corner pharmacy.