Applications

Where the environment itself needs to feel different.

We organize by setting and operational goal, not by medical condition. These are application maps, not finished claims.

Pick a goal. Open a starting session.

Starting points, not prescriptions. Keep the first week gentle and learn what the environment is actually doing for the person in it.

🧘

Calm & Stress Relief

Lower barrier, regulation-first.

Ambient Field5–15 minRoom use or tent unzipped

How to start: Let the infrared live in the room. Lowest barrier. Good first move when you want a state shift without forcing the body.

What to track: Breath rate, jaw release, sense of safety, and how long the calmer state lasts.

🩹

Pain & Local Relief

Local comfort and precision first.

Targeted Delivery2–15 minAim at the area

How to start: Direct the generator or lamp at the area you care about. Start short and repeat consistently.

What to track: Comfort before and after, ease of movement, and whether the change holds 2–24 hours later.

🌙

Better Sleep

Evening settling without heroics.

Ambient → Full-body10–20 minUnzipped or light zip

How to start: Use later in the day and keep it gentle. The goal is to settle, not to rev up.

What to track: Sleep onset, overnight wakeups, and morning ease.

🏃

Mobility & Recovery

Warm first, then move.

Targeted → Full-body8–20 minLocal focus or half zip

How to start: Warm the area, then pair with movement or bodywork while tissue still feels available.

What to track: Range of motion, first-movement stiffness, and next-morning ease.

💧

Sweat & Clearance

Progress gradually.

Full-body Sauna10–30 minFully zipped

How to start: Hydrate well and build capacity instead of turning session one into a test of will.

What to track: Sweat onset, thirst, post-session energy, and next-day recovery.

Energy & Readiness

Steadiness instead of buzz.

Ambient → Targeted5–12 minRoom use or local focus

How to start: Morning or early-day sessions. Keep the dose light enough to be repeatable.

What to track: Afternoon slump, steadiness later in the day, and workout readiness.

Recovery is part of the dose. The effect is not only the time spent with the generator or in the chamber. What happens in the 10 to 30 minutes after a session is part of the intervention. Stay warm, hydrate, and let the body integrate before jumping back into cold or stress.

The environment changes the way people arrive. In any setting where people need to feel warmer, safer, calmer, or more available, the goal is not spectacle. It is a better starting condition for whatever happens next.

Explore the application map

Expand a category to see example settings. These are maps, not promises.

Clinical & Therapeutic

Practices and rooms where protocol logic matters.

Clinical

Chiropractic & Manual Therapy

Pre-warm tissue, increase local comfort, and reduce guarding before hands-on work.

Clinical

Massage & Bodywork

Warm, mobile tissue versus cold, guarded tissue. The practitioner’s hands know instantly.

Clinical

Psychotherapy & Counseling

Thermal comfort can be part of a safer physiological starting context for presence and honesty.

Clinical

Physical Therapy & Rehab

Warm tissue responds better to exercise, stretching, and neuromuscular re-education.

Clinical

Complex Care Practices

One support layer in a larger stack where the body is already carrying multiple loads.

Clinical

Sensory & Regulation Rooms

Low-intensity ambient warmth as part of a careful, non-invasive sensory environment.

Occupational Health & First Responders

Recovery infrastructure for people whose work demands repeated exposure to environmental stress.

First Responder

Fire Stations

Firefighters face chronic exposure to combustion byproducts, heavy metals, and particulate matter. Post-shift radiant recovery supports the same clearance and autonomic settling patterns the clinical literature describes, in a population that needs it most and has the least time for complex protocols. A fire chief already uses this platform for cardiac, toxin, inflammation, and lung function support in his department.

First Responder

EMS & Law Enforcement Stations

First responders carry cumulative stress loads that degrade sleep, autonomic regulation, and tissue recovery over time. A recovery tool that requires no warm-up, fits in a break room, and produces a meaningful session in fifteen minutes can become part of shift-rotation culture rather than an afterthought.

Industrial

Factories & Warehouses

Workers in cold, physically demanding environments accumulate muscular tension, joint stiffness, and fatigue across shifts. Radiant recovery rooms near break areas could reduce the chronic load that builds between shifts.

Military

Military & Tactical Recovery

High-stress, high-exposure environments where recovery infrastructure can support readiness without adding pharmacological complexity. Portable form factors that deploy without plumbing or ventilation fit field conditions.

"This tool can be used for cardiac issues, toxins, inflammation, and lung function in firefighters dealing with day-to-day exposure." -- Walt Cross, Fire Chief. Read annotated voices

Hospitality, Recovery & Daily Life

Spaces where comfort is part of the service.

Hospitality

Hotels & Recovery Suites

Rooms and suites where the environment itself helps people settle and recover.

Commercial

Waiting Rooms & Lobbies

Start down-regulation before the appointment instead of after it.

Commercial

Restaurants & Cafés

Hospitality at the physics level. Radiant warmth supports comfort and presence.

Wellness

Spas & Recovery Centers

Group environments designed with the same intentionality as lighting, acoustics, and service flow.

Performance

Locker Rooms & Athletic Training

Pre-workout priming and post-workout recovery environments where time, consistency, and comfort matter. NCAA baseball programs and NFL rehab facilities already use this platform for both muscular and mental recovery across athletes regardless of age or condition.

Daily Life

Teacher Lounges & Staff Rooms

Break spaces that actually restore instead of merely pausing the stress.

Institutions & Public Spaces

Where thermal comfort can change the tone of the environment.

Institutional

Schools

Purpose-built calm or recovery spaces for staff or selected student settings.

Institutional

Corporate Wellness

Infrared as an environmental feature, as unremarkable and essential as good lighting.

Public

Retail Warm-Up Zones

Cold-climate entry areas where people thaw and settle as they enter.

Public

Community Recovery Rooms

Shared spaces where the goal is regulation, not spectacle.

Frontier

Cold-Climate Vestibules

Entryways where radiant warmth could outperform bulk convective discomfort.

Frontier

Reflective Room Builds

Architectural spaces designed around radiant logic instead of just hot-air logic.

Frontier Environments

Where the technology starts looking like a platform in the broader sense.

Transport

Vehicles & Cabins

Imagine warm-up environments where the heat source itself is doing higher-quality work.

Architecture

Reflective Recovery Rooms

Rooms built to shape radiant conditions rather than merely fight ambient cold.

Innovation

Custom Hospitality Builds

Signature spaces that use the platform in ways a stock tent never could.

Pilot

Novel-setting Trials

When the first goal is not scale but disciplined observation in a real environment.

Don't see your setting?

If there is a space where people need to feel warmer, safer, calmer, or more available, this platform may belong there.