Education — Before Dashboard — Alle’s ClinX
Education & Campus Solutions

Educational Campus
Hygiene Infrastructure

Structured hygiene systems designed for schools, colleges, and universities — ensuring healthier learning environments, safer residential facilities, and consistent sanitation across classrooms, hostels, laboratories, and shared campus spaces.

The campus hygiene reality
12–15
Illness-related absence days per student annually
A structured hygiene system targets a 25–40% reduction — directly protecting academic continuity and institutional credibility.
30–50%
Chemical wastage in unmanaged facilities
Over-dilution and guesswork in the absence of precision tools — a direct and preventable drain on institutional budgets.
42–54%
Procurement cost savings vs. import-dependent models
India-engineered formulations eliminate import markup while delivering higher efficacy in NCR hard-water conditions.
80–85%
Reduction in staff onboarding time
ClinXAi multilingual QR guidance empowers contract and temporary staff — the most common failure point in campus hygiene consistency.
01 — The problem
Why campus hygiene fails — and it is never about effort

Academic campuses are dense, shared ecosystems with continuous rotation of students, staff, and outsourced housekeeping teams. Cleaning quality in these environments depends not on individual effort but on how clearly systems are defined. Where no system exists, outcomes are inconsistent — not because anyone is careless, but because institutional memory lives in people rather than processes.

“Consistency matters more than intensity. A well-designed system outperforms a motivated individual every single time.”

There is also a chemistry problem specific to the NCR. Delhi NCR ground and municipal water carries 200–1,000 ppm TDS — conditions that cause imported disinfectants, engineered for European water at 50–180 ppm, to lose up to 60% of their antimicrobial efficacy. For campuses serving children under 12, this is compounded by the additional requirement for pH-neutral formulations (pH 6–8) on contact surfaces — a CBSE compliance requirement that most generic products do not meet.

Alle’s ClinX – Education Solutions

Hygiene Standards Expected

Educational campuses operate across classrooms, hostels, laboratories, training facilities, cafeterias, and common areas where hygiene must remain consistent despite continuous student movement and residential occupancy.

Consistent Learning & Living Hygiene

Cleaning standards must remain consistent across classrooms, hostels, and training blocks.

When residential and academic areas are cleaned unevenly, hygiene complaints increase as usage patterns differ throughout the day.


Example: Classrooms may remain clean, but hostel corridors or training areas may show inconsistent cleaning due to different housekeeping schedules.

Safe Cleaning in Living Spaces

Hostels and residential areas require chemicals that clean effectively without causing discomfort.

Incorrect chemical use impacts student comfort through strong odors or residues.


Example: Strong washroom cleaners used in hostel areas sometimes leave odors affecting student living conditions.

Hygiene in Training Facilities

Training kitchens, workshops, and skill labs require structured cleaning due to heavy equipment.

Heavy equipment and shared usage areas are prone to dirt accumulation if cleaning is not rigorous.


Example: Training labs used continuously may accumulate residue and dirt if cleaning cycles are inconsistent.

Solutions Matrix

Select a dimension to view operational details.

What Breaks Standards

Campus hygiene standards often break due to varied cleaning focus between academic, hostel, and training areas.

Uneven Cleaning Across Zones

Academic blocks receive more cleaning attention than residential or training facilities.

Example: Libraries and offices remain clean while hostels and sports or training blocks show hygiene gaps.

Improper Chemical Usage

Same chemicals used across classrooms, kitchens, and hostels reduce effectiveness.

Example: Kitchen areas sometimes cleaned with general floor cleaners, reducing grease removal efficiency.

Supply Variations

Hostel and kitchen areas consume chemicals faster than academic areas.

Example: Hostel blocks may run out of cleaning supplies earlier than planned procurement cycles.

Alle’s ClinX System Alignment

Alle’s ClinX supports campuses by aligning cleaning solutions across academic, residential, and training spaces.

Standardized Campus Chemistry

Products ensure consistent performance across classrooms, hostels, and training areas.

Example: Facilities observe predictable cleanliness across both living and learning spaces.

Guided Housekeeping Practices

Dilution and usage guidance help teams maintain consistent cleaning practices.

Example: Hostel and training facility teams follow uniform cleaning standards.

Reliable Multi-Building Supply

Supply continuity ensures smooth cleaning operations across campus zones.

Example: Campuses avoid supply gaps affecting hostel or cafeteria cleaning.

Standards Maintained

Maintaining hygiene standards improves student living comfort and institutional experience.

Better Student Living Environment

Clean hostels and common areas improve student comfort and satisfaction.

Example: Students experience hygienic living and learning spaces consistently.

Predictable Operational Costs

Structured usage stabilizes campus cleaning budgets.

Example: Institutions observe steady consumption across academic and residential facilities.

Stronger Institutional Perception

Clean campuses reflect professional institutional management.

Example: Parents and visitors perceive campuses as well-managed environments.

Education — After Dashboard — Alle’s ClinX
02 — Zone Protocols

Every campus zone has a different requirement

Effective hygiene requires zone-specific methodology. A classroom is not a laboratory. A hostel is not a washroom. Each space carries different risk profiles, surface sensitivities, and occupancy patterns.

Zone A
Classrooms & Libraries
High-touch surfaces, daily rotation, child-contact areas
  • Desks, chairs, door handles: Daily wipe with pH-neutral multi-surface cleaner — mandatory for all child-contact surfaces per CBSE guidelines.
  • Floors: Daily mop with Lime Floor Disinfectant at 20ml/L, hard-water stabilised for NCR conditions.
  • Glass & displays: Weekly cleaning with Glass & Mirror cleaner to maintain professional appearance.

pH-neutral formulations on all surfaces prevent skin irritation for students and protect institutional furniture finishes from corrosive damage.

Zone B
Laboratories & Computer Labs
Sensitive equipment, specialist surfaces, zero contamination
  • Workbenches: pH-neutral formulations only — prevents chemical interference with analytical experiments and sensitive instruments.
  • Stainless steel components: Metal Surface Cleaner at 1:4 ratio to prevent oxidation, scale buildup, and premature corrosion.
  • Computer equipment surrounds: Low-VOC, lint-free surface wipes to avoid static residue and screen damage.

Correct product selection in labs prevents chemical cross-reactions that damage high-value equipment — a direct protection of capital assets.

Zone C
Washrooms & Hand Hygiene Points
Highest infection transmission risk, highest frequency required
  • Toilet fixtures: 30ml Transparent Toilet Cleaner per bowl — 15 minutes contact time before scrubbing for full limescale and biofilm removal.
  • Hand hygiene stations: 100% availability of Glycerine-enriched Handwash Liquid via dispensers at all entry and exit points.

Glycerine prevents dermatitis, increasing student compliance with handwashing — the single highest-impact action for reducing gastrointestinal illness transmission on campus.

Zone D
Hostels & Residential Facilities
Shared living, communal laundry, occupancy continuity
  • Bedding & uniforms: Enzyme-based Laundry Detergent at 50ml per communal load — removes organic stains without harming shared-cycle infrastructure.
  • Linen disinfection: Oxygen Bleach at 10–20g per load — colour-safe, high-efficacy disinfection without fabric degradation.
  • Common area floors: Daily mop cycle with Pine Floor Disinfectant — reliable antimicrobial action in areas with persistent foot traffic.

Validated laundry and washroom hygiene in residential facilities is a documented driver of institutional trust and student retention — particularly for female residential students.

03 — Product Architecture

LABS Series & Mini Series — matched to campus scale

Large campuses use the Labs Series concentrates for cost-efficient high-volume use. Hostels and decentralised offices use the Mini Series ready-to-use format — removing dilution complexity where supervision is limited.

All surface products for child-contact areas carry pH 6.0–8.0 — CBSE Compliant
Product Active Ingredient Campus Zone Safety Standard
Floor Disinfectant (Pine) Pine Oil 5% w/w (Phenolic) Corridors, hostels, general areas IS 16555
Floor Disinfectant (Lime) BKC 0.5% (QAC) — pH 6.5–7.5 Classrooms, libraries, common areas IS 13671
Multipurpose Cleaner Alkaline Surfactants — pH 8.0–9.0 Walls, hard surfaces, furniture Child-safe pH
Handwash Liquid Surfactants + Glycerine — pH 6.0–7.0 All hand hygiene stations IS 4955
Transparent Toilet Cleaner Hydrochloric Acid 33% All washroom fixtures IS 4670
Laundry Liquid Detergent Enzymes + Surfactants (Neutral) Hostel laundry — bedding, uniforms Enzyme-based
Oxygen Bleach Sodium Percarbonate Linen disinfection Colour-safe
Metal Surface Cleaner Chelating Agents (Acidic) Labs — stainless steel equipment 1:4 dilution
Glass & Mirror Cleaner Solvent-based Surfactant — pH 6.5–7.5 Classrooms, computer labs, offices Low VOC
04 — Digital Intelligence

Two tools that make hygiene independent of who shows up

Staff turnover is the primary failure mode in campus hygiene. The system must hold together when familiar staff leave and contract teams rotate in — without retraining from scratch every term.

01 — Planning
Metricon

Smart calculation engine using campus-specific data — square footage, classroom counts, cleaning frequency — to generate exact chemical requirements per term. Eliminates the 30–50% overuse caused by estimation and moves procurement from reactive to planned.

Campus zone mapping Term-by-term planning Zero stockouts
02 — Guidance
ClinXAi

QR-embedded safety intelligence on every product — decodes MSDS into actionable multilingual instructions in Hindi, English, and regional languages. Reduces onboarding time by 80–85%, ensuring temporary and contract staff operate safely from day one.

Multilingual No login required MSDS simplified
05 — Regulatory Alignment

Built for the standards that govern student safety

CBSE, State Boards, and NCPCR mandates exist as abstract policies. This system converts them into daily, verifiable ground-level execution.

CBSE & State Boards
Child-Safe Surface Standards

pH-neutral formulations (pH 6.0–8.0) are mandatory for all child-contact surfaces. Every LABS product deployed in classrooms and libraries meets this requirement — aligned with IS 13671 and IS 4955.

NCPCR Guidelines
Residential Facility Safety

Validated laundry and washroom hygiene protocols in hostels directly address NCPCR requirements for institutional care environments — with documented outcomes on student health and retention.

BIS Certifications
Indian Standards Adherence

All products comply with IS 13671 (QAC indoor disinfectants), IS 4955 (hand hygiene for child environments), and IS 4670 (acidic cleaners) — validated for Indian conditions, not imported specifications.

Get started

Your campus deserves hygiene
that holds across every term

We work with campus administrators and facility teams to assess zone requirements, map product deployment, and build a system that performs consistently — regardless of staff rotation, water conditions, or seasonal pressure.

Request a Consultation View LABS Products

No commitment required.
NCR-based team. Response within 24 hours.