A real European living room during the 2026 heatwave — no cooling device in sight, intense sun pouring in, indoor air thick and uncomfortable. The exact scenario a portable climate device is built to prevent.
According to climate observations across the Northern Hemisphere, the 2026 summer season is projected to rank among the hottest ever recorded. Heatwaves are arriving earlier, lasting longer, and reaching deeper into regions that historically enjoyed mild temperatures. The pressure on homes — and on the people inside them — has never been more visible.
The problem runs deeper than the weather alone. A large share of residential buildings in Europe, North America, and parts of Asia were originally designed to retain heat during cold winters. Thick insulation, sealed envelopes, and dense materials make perfect sense in January — but the same architecture traps warm air during the summer and turns living rooms, bedrooms, and home offices into stuffy, exhausting spaces. Traditional split-system air conditioners can solve the issue, but they come with a heavy bill: invasive installation, drilling through exterior walls, landlord approvals, and significant electricity consumption.
This is exactly where a portable, plug-and-play climate device like the EpiCooler — built around Coolizi technology — changes the equation. It doesn't require tools, mounting brackets, or professional setup. It moves from room to room with you. It runs on a regular wall outlet. And it was designed for the way people actually live in 2026 — across rented apartments, multi-purpose rooms, and modern homes where flexibility matters as much as performance.