The measurement of respiratory viruses in indoor air is critical foreffectively preventing the spread of diseases. This is typically accomplished bycounting the nucleic acids or plaques of air-sampled viruses. Herein, we present agrowth-based airborne virus surveillance (G-AVS) platform based on paper-basedelectrochemical immunosensors for targeting hemagglutinin (HA) and nucleopro-tein (NP), and water-condensation air sampling for the quantitative measurement ofairborne influenza viruses. The measurements, compared with RT-qPCR,demonstrated consistency between the two. In the measurements of airborneinfluenza viruses conducted in an elementary school using G-AVS, 23% (4/17) ofindoor air samples were positive, with concentrations ranging from 1.7 × 104 to 1.6× 106 gene copies/m3, while losses in the HA relative to NP were 48−75% at arelative humidity of 27.0−36.8% and 60 min air sampling, similar to infectivitiesreported in the literature. This platform has the potential for rapid and cost-effectiveairborne virus measurement.