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Facilities Inventory: Room Types

Last updated: May 12, 2026
Content created: January 1998

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ROOM TYPE: A classification system that uses a code to describe a room’s last use as of June 30th in a fiscal year.  Common room types include classrooms, private offices, conference rooms, and non-class research laboratories.

For additional information, see Cornell University policy 2.7 "Reporting the Use of Facilities" at https://policy.cornell.edu/sites/default/files/vol2_7.pdf.

ROOM TYPESROOM TYPES (continued)ROOM TYPES (continued)
Unclassified Facilities (Non-Assignable)
010 Custodial Area
011 Fallout Shelter
020 Circulation Area
021 Staircase
022 Elevators
024 Lobby
029 Elevator Machine Room
030 Mechanical Area
031 Public Toilet
032 Private Toilet
035 Shaft

Unclassified Facilities (Assignable)
050 Incapable of Use
060 Alteration or Conversion Area
081 Dept Moved, Capable of Use

Classroom Facilities
110 Classroom
115 Classroom Service

Laboratory Facilities
210 Class Laboratory, Dry (Regularly Scheduled)
212 Class Laboratory, Wet (Regularly Scheduled)
215 Class Laboratory, Dry, Service
217 Class Laboratory, Wet, Service
220 Open Class Laboratory (Irregularly
      Scheduled)
225 Open Class Laboratory, Service
230 Individual Study Laboratory
235 Individual Study Laboratory, Service
250 Non-Class Laboratory (Research)
255 Non-Class Lab (Research) Service
260 Department Special Service
270 Incubator Laboratory
272 Walk-In Environmental Chamber (Research)
275 Environmental Chamber Service (Research)

Office Facilities
310 Office, Private (Station Qty 1)
314 Office, Shared (Station Qty 2–4)
 
Office Facilities (continued)
315 Office Service
320 Office, Open Plan (also reception)
350 Office, Conference Room
355 Office, Conference Room Service

Study Facilities
410 Reading-Study Room
420 Library Stack
430 Open Stack Reading Room
440 Processing Room
455 Study Service

Special Use Facilities
510 Armory
515 Armory Service
520 Athletic-Physical Education
523 Athletic Facilities Spectator Seating
525 Athletic-Physical Education Service
530 Audio-Visual, Radio, TV
535 Audio-Visual, Radio, TV Service
540 Clinic (Non-Medical)
545 Clinic Service (Non-Medical)
550 Demonstration Facility
555 Demonstration Facility Service
560 Field Building
570 Animal Quarters
575 Animal Quarters Service
580 Greenhouse
585 Greenhouse Service

General Use Facilities
610 Assembly
615 Assembly Service
620 Exhibition
625 Exhibition Service
630 Food Facility
635 Food Facility Service
640 Day Care
645 Day Care Service
650 Lounge

 
General Use Facilities (continued)
655 Lounge Service
660 Merchandising Facility
665 Merchandising Facility Service
670 Recreation
675 Recreation Service
680 Meeting Room
685 Meeting Room Service
690 Locker Room

Supporting Facilities
710 Data Processing-Computer
715 Data Processing-Computer Service
720 Shop
725 Shop Service
730 Central Storage
735 Central Storage Service
740 Vehicle Storage
745 Vehicle Storage Service
750 Central Services

Health Care Facilities (Student & Animal)
810 Patient Bedroom
820 Patient Bath
830 Nurse Station
840 Surgery
850 Health Treatment
855 Patient Isolation Room
860 Health Service Laboratory
870 Health Supplies
880 Health Care Public Waiting
890 Health Staff On-Call
895 Health Care Service

Residential Facilities
910 Single Bedroom
919 Toilet-Bath-Shower
935 Closet
940 Lounge (Closed access - housing only)
943 Shared Bedroom (Double or more)
950 Apartment Space
970 House
 

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Unclassified Room Space (Non-Assignable)
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
010 Custodial
Area 





 
For servicing the
maintenance and operation
functions of a facility.




 
Janitor closets, janitor rooms, janitor
toilets, trash rooms, maintenance
supply and storage closets, building
storage areas, etc.



 
Does not include mechanical rooms,
public toilets, lobbies, corridors, unit
storage, or other service spaces
associated with other room types.
used by the maintenance staff should not
be coded with this code, but under the
appropriate room type that best
represents the function of the room.
011 Fallout
Shelter
   
020 Circulation
Area 





 
A primary way to move from
one space to another in a
building, or in or out of the
building. 



 
Hallways, vestibules, corridors,
passageways, alcoves, foyers,
loading platforms, receiving or
shipping areas, and ramps. Includes
smaller corridors that serve a small
group of rooms (formerly referred to
as a suite) that may be behind locked
doors.
Does not include space for circulation
within another space, such as in libraries,
gymnasiums, shops, etc. Does not
include passageways that house
supporting equipment for adjacent rooms
(see appropriate service room type
category).
 
021 Staircase

 
A primary way to move from
one floor level to another
within a facility.
Open or enclosed stairs and fire
stairs within a facility, 
 
Does not include stairs used for minor
changes in level on one floor, or exterior
stairs.
022 Elevator

 
Mechanical conveyance of
people and/or freight from
one level to another.
Passenger and freight elevators, lifts,
book lifts, and dumbwaiters.
 
None

 
024 Lobby



 
Transition from an exterior or
interior Circulation Area to an
area of specific use.

 
Auditorium anterooms and any dual
purpose areas that serve as both
lounge and Circulation Area.
Generally, contains benches, seats,
and/or coat racks.
Areas or rooms with a receptionist.



 
029 Elevator
Machine Room










 
A restricted-access, enclosed
machinery space outside the
hoist way, intended for full
bodily entry that contains the
drive machine, electrical
and/or mechanical equipment
used directly to support the
vertical conveyance systems
of passenger elevators,
freight elevators, service
elevators, dumb waiters,
material lifts and wheelchair
lifts.
Only rooms that support vertical
conveyance. The American Society
of Mechanical Engineers requires
that this room cannot be used for
any other purpose. These rooms
house equipment that contains
pinch-points, high voltage, and
rotating elements, and access is
limited to authorized personnel.



 
Does not include rooms that support
horizontal conveyance systems, or rooms
supporting other mechanical systems.









 
030 Mechanical
Area













 
Included are covered and
walled areas that one or more
utility and/or mechanical
functions for the building.
These areas range from large
rooms co-located on a
“mechanical” floor, or
basement area to small
closet spaces distributed
throughout the building. Such
areas, while generally located
within the exterior walls of a
building or as an accessible
roof structure, may be
separately housed adjacent
to the structure they serve.
Such areas, commonly referred to as
electrical, meter, network, or
telecommunications spaces, include
air-conditioning rooms, boiler rooms,
cooling towers, electrical rooms,
emergency generators, fan rooms,
heat distribution rooms, incinerator
rooms, machine rooms, mechanical
rooms, pump rooms, transformer
rooms, and utility corridors or
horizontal shaft space.




 
Does not include: machine or equipment
rooms directly related to laboratories or
shops.












 
031 Public Toilet


 
Toilet rooms used by faculty,
staff, students, and the
public.
 
Lounges associated with rest rooms,
handicapped rest rooms, and toilet
rooms with showers.
 
Does not include shower facilities
associated only with locker rooms, or
emergency chemical showers located in
hallways.
032 Private Toilet



 
Toilet rooms or shower
facilities associated with a
particular suite of rooms or
used by a specific person or
unit.
Toilet rooms with use limited to a
single individual or restricted to use
by a specific unit.

 
Does not include mudrooms or toilet
rooms available to the public.


 
035 Shaft

 
Area within a building
specifically dedicated to
vertical mechanical ducts.
Accessible ducts for movement of air,
pipe ducts, ducts for hoisting
equipment, areaways, etc.
Does not include crawl spaces, pipes
located in walls, floors, or other structural
membranes of the building.
050 Incapable of
Use


 
Unoccupied rooms that
cannot be used due to
environmental deficiency.

 
Attics.



 
Rooms that are being modified or are not
completed at the time of the inventory
update are classified Alteration or
Conversion Area (060). Does not include
storage areas.
060 Alteration or
Conversion Area


 
Rooms that are temporarily
out of use because they are
being altered, remodeled, or
rehabilitated at the time of the
inventory update.
  
081 Department
Moved, Capable
of Use
 
To identify a room in a facility
that has been vacated by the
department and is waiting for
re-occupancy.
All rooms with vacant occupancy.
Does not imply furnishings and other
items have been removed.
 
 
Classroom Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
110 Classroom
























 
A room or space used
primarily for instruction
classes, and that is not tied to
a specific subject or discipline
by equipment in the room or
the configuration of the
space.


















 
Rooms or spaces generally used for
scheduled instruction that require no
special, restrictive equipment or
configuration. These spaces may be
called lecture rooms, lecture-
demonstration rooms, and general
purpose classrooms. A classroom
may be equipped with tablet
armchairs, (fixed to the floor, joined
in groups, or flexible in arrangement),
tables and chairs (as in a seminar
room), or similar types of seating.
These spaces may contain
multimedia or telecommunications
equipment. A classroom may be
furnished with special equipment
appropriate to a specific area of
study, if this equipment does not
render the space unsuitable for use
by classes in other areas of study.





 
Does not include conference rooms
(350), meeting rooms (680), auditoria
(610), or class laboratories (210-230).
Conference and meeting spaces are
distinguished from seminar spaces
according to primary use; spaces with
chairs and tables that are used primarily
for meetings (as opposed to classes) are
conference spaces or meeting rooms
(see codes 350 and 680 for distinction).
Auditoria are distinguished from lecture
rooms based on primary use. A large
room with seating oriented toward some
focal point, and that is used for dramatic
or musical productions, is an assembly
(610) facility (e.g., an auditorium normally
used for purposes other than scheduled
classes). A class laboratory is
distinguished from a classroom based on
equipment in the space and by its
restrictive use. If a space is restricted to a
single or closely related group of
disciplines by special equipment or its
configuration, it may be logically
considered a laboratory (see code 200
series).
115 Classroom
Service


 
A room that directly serves
one or more classrooms as
an extension of the activities
in that room.
 
Projection rooms, coatrooms,
preparation rooms, closets, and
storage rooms if they serve
classrooms.
 
Does not include projection rooms
coatrooms, preparation rooms, closets or
storage rooms if they serve instructional
laboratories, conference rooms, meeting
rooms, assembly facilities, etc.
Laboratory Room Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
210 Class
Laboratory, Dry
(Regularly
Scheduled)





















 
Room used primarily for
formally or regularly
scheduled classes that
require special purpose
equipment or a specific
space configuration for
student participation,
experimentation, observation,
or practice in an academic
discipline. A space is
considered scheduled if the
activities generate weekly
student contact hours, the
activities fulfill course
requirements, and/or there is a
formal convener present.
Neither water nor a fume hood
is present within the room.







 
Class laboratories designed for or
furnished with equipment to serve the
needs of a particular discipline for
group instruction in formally
or regularly scheduled classes. This
special equipment normally limits or
precludes the space’s use by other
disciplines. Included are spaces
generally called teaching laboratories,
instructional shops, computer
laboratories, drafting rooms, band
rooms, choral rooms, (group) music
practice rooms, language laboratories,
(group) studios, theater stage areas
used primarily for instruction,
instructional health laboratories, and
similar specially designed or equipped
rooms, if they are used primarily for
group instruction in formally or
regularly scheduled classes.
Computer rooms used primarily to
instruct students in the use of
computers are classified as class
laboratories if that instruction is
conducted primarily in formally or
regularly scheduled classes.
Does not include classrooms (110). Does
not include informally scheduled or
unscheduled laboratories (see open class
laboratory, 220). Does not include spaces
generally defined as research/non-class
laboratories (250). Does not include
gymnasia, pools, drill halls, laboratory
schools, demonstration houses, and
similar facilities that are included under
special use facilities (code 500 series).
Computer rooms in libraries or used
primarily for study should be classified as
study rooms (410).












 
212 Class
Laboratory, Wet
(Regularly
Scheduled)















 
Room used primarily for
formally or regularly
scheduled classes that
require special purpose
equipment or a specific
space configuration for
student participation,
experimentation, observation,
or practice in an academic
discipline. A space is
considered scheduled if the
activities generate weekly 
student contact hours, the
activities fulfill course
requirements, and/or there is a
formal convener present.
Water and/or one or more fume
hoods is/are available within
the room to serve the function
of the room.
See the Includes description for 210
Class Laboratory, Dry. The primary
distinction here is the presence of
water and/or a fume hood within the
room.














 
See the Limitations/Comments for 210,
Class Laboratory, Dry.

















 
215 Class
Laboratory
Service, Dry,
Service







 
Room that directly serves one
or more “dry” class
laboratories as an extension
of the activities.







 
Any space that directly serves a dry
class laboratory. Included are
projection rooms,
telecommunications control
booths, coatrooms, preparation
rooms, closets, material storage
(including temporary hazardous
materials storage), balance
rooms, cold rooms, stockrooms,
darkrooms, equipment issue
rooms, etc., if they serve regularly
scheduled, dry class laboratories.
Does not include service spaces that
support a classroom (see 115), open
class laboratory (see 225), or a
research/non-class laboratory (see 255).
Animal (570) and greenhouse (580)
facilities are categorized separately.





 
217 Class
Laboratory
Service, Wet,
Service 







 
Room that directly serves one
or more “wet” class
laboratories as an extension
of the activities.







 
Any space that directly serves a wet
class laboratory. Included are
projection rooms,
telecommunications control
booths, coatrooms, preparation
rooms, closets, material storage
(including temporary hazardous
materials storage), balance
rooms, cold rooms, stockrooms,
darkrooms, equipment issue
rooms, etc., if they serve regularly
scheduled, wet class laboratories.
Does not include service spaces that
support a classroom (see 115), open
class laboratory (see 225), or a
research/non-class laboratory (see 255).
Animal (570) and greenhouse (580)
facilities are categorized separately.





 
220 Open Class
Laboratory
(Irregularly
Scheduled)






















 
Laboratory used primarily for 
group instruction in
experimentation, observation,
or practice in a field of study.
The laboratory is informally
scheduled, unscheduled, or
open.



















 
Laboratories designed for or furnished
with equipment that serves the
needs of a particular discipline or
discipline group for group instruction,
where (1) use of the space is not
formally or regularly scheduled, or (2)
access is limited to specific groups of
students. Included in this category
are music practice rooms, language
laboratories, and other special
laboratories or learning laboratories
(e.g., speech, hearing, law,
psychology, and health-related
professions) if discipline restricted,
individual laboratories, and computer
laboratories involving specialized
restrictive software or where access
is limited to specific categories of
students. For example, a computer
laboratory with only engineering or
CAD software, or a computer-based
writing laboratory available only to
English Composition students would
be classified as an open laboratory
because of the restricted usage of
the space for a particular discipline or
discipline group.
Laboratories with formally or regularly
scheduled classes are classified as a
class laboratory, dry (210) or class
laboratory, wet (212). This category also
does not include spaces defined as
research/non-class laboratory (250). A
space that contains equipment (e.g.,
computers), that does not restrict use to a
specific discipline or discipline group and
is typically used at a student’s
convenience, should be classified as a
study room (410). Instructional
laboratories designed primarily for
individual (vs. group) study or practice
should be coded as individual study
laboratories (230).










 
225 Open Class
Laboratory
Service








 
Room directly serving one or
more open class laboratories
as an extension of the
activities in those rooms.







 
Only those spaces that directly serve
an open class laboratory. Included
are projection rooms,
telecommunications control
booths, coatrooms, preparation
rooms, closets, material storage
(including temporary hazardous
materials storage), balance
rooms, cold rooms, stockrooms,
darkrooms, equipment issue
rooms, and similar facilities, if
they serve open class laboratories.
Does not include service spaces that
support a classroom (see 115), class
laboratory (see 215 or 217), or research
non-class laboratory (see 255). Animal
(570) and greenhouse (580) facilities
are categorized separately.





 
230 Individual
Study Laboratory




 
Laboratory used primarily for
individual student
experimentation, observation,
or practice in a particular
field of study. The space is
informally scheduled,
unscheduled, or open.
Music practice rooms, individual
study laboratories, sound booths
used in language learning, and
similar rooms that serve a particular
field of study area and are intended
for individual use.
 
Does not include individual study facilities
that are intended for general purposes.
Study areas not related to a specific area
of study are classified as study facilities.


 
235 Individual
Study Laboratory,
Service



 
Room that directly serves one
or more individual study
laboratories as an extension
of the activities in those
rooms.

 
Equipment storage rooms,
stockrooms, and similar rooms that
serve an individual study laboratory
(230).


 
Does not include rooms that serve class
laboratories (210, 212), open class
laboratories (220), or non-class
laboratories (250). Rooms that provide
housing for laboratory animals are
classified as animal quarters.
Greenhouses are separately coded.
250 Non-Class
Laboratory
(Research)



 
Room used for laboratory
application, research, and/or
training in research
methodology requiring
special purpose equipment
for staff and/or student
experimentation or observation.
Rooms generally referred to as
research laboratories and research
laboratory-offices.



 
Does not include rooms generally
referred to as teaching laboratories, such
as class laboratories, special class
laboratories or individual study
laboratories.

 
255 Non-Class
Laboratory
Service
(Research)


 
Room that directly services
one or more non-class
laboratories as an extension
of the activities in those
rooms.

 
Balance rooms, cold rooms,
stockrooms, dark rooms, etc. that
serve a non-class laboratory.



 
Does not include balance rooms, cold
rooms, stockrooms, darkrooms, etc. that
serve a class, special class, or individual
study laboratory. Rooms that provide
housing for laboratory animals are
classified as animal quarters.
Greenhouses are separately coded.
260 Department
Special Service





 
Central facilities dedicated to
unit or divisional service for
supplying needed components
of a particular nature, or for
special equipment used by
students or faculty in the
pursuit of the answer to a
problem.
Workshops, radiation rooms, special
preparation rooms, x-ray rooms,
temperature control rooms, repair
rooms, equipment rooms,
photographic laboratories, electronic
laboratories, and specially designed
rooms to accomplish the tasks.
 
 
270 Incubator
Laboratory

 
Rooms with temperature and
humidity control for production
of plant tissue cultures,
hatching, and brooding.
Complete rooms constructed in the
building infrastructure that have a
controlled atmosphere.
 
Does not include rooms that have one or
more pieces of equipment or chambers
that are called incubators.
 
272 Walk-In
Environmental
Chambers




 
Room with controlled
atmosphere and/or lighting
generally used for plant
growth, tissue culture, or
rearing insects or other small
non-vertebrate animals.

 
Complete rooms constructed for
controlled atmosphere, generally
manipulating temperature, light
and/or humidity beyond what is found
in the surrounding room environment.


 
Does not include reach-in chambers,
which are pieces of stand-alone
equipment that exist within other room
types (possibly within Room Type 275,
Environmental Chamber Service). Does
not include walk-in coolers or freezers
used for food storage. (Use Food Facility
Service, 635).
275
Environmental
Chamber Service












 
Room that directly services
one or more walk-in or reach
in environmental chambers.












 
Any small circulation area
immediately outside a walk-in
environmental chamber that
exists between public
circulation and the walk-in itself; Any
room that contains multiple walk-in or
reach-in chambers, the room’s sole
purpose should be to support the use
of the chambers; Any room that is
used to support the use of nearby
chambers, for example, a room
where plants are potted, prepped,
measured, etc. or a room where
insects are manipulated while
normally residing in cages or
containers in chambers.
 
Office Room Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
310 Office,
Private














 
Room configured for
occupancy primarily by one
person, where activities and
routines that involve the
following tasks occur:
writing; communicating with
others in person or
electronically; small-scale
meetings with students,
colleagues, staff, and other
visitors; preparing reports,
document- and Internet-
based research; developing
course materials;
conducting transactions with
members of the university
community, etc.
Office space sized for assignment to
one permanent occupant. The room
may often contain a small table and
guest chairs.












 
 
314 Office,
Shared














 
Room configured for
occupancy by two to four
people, where activities and
routines that involve the
following tasks occur:
writing; communicating with
others in person or
electronically; small-scale
meetings with students,
colleagues, staff, and other
visitors; preparing reports,
document- and Internet-
based research; developing
course materials;
conducting transactions with
members of the university
community, etc.
Office space sized and configured for
occupancy by two to four individuals
These spaces are sometimes rooms
that can flex between serving as a
private office for one occupant and a
shared office.










 
 
315 Office Service










 
Room that directly serves an
office or group of offices as
an extension of the activities
in those rooms.







 
File rooms, breakrooms, kitchenettes
serving office areas, copy and fax
rooms, vaults, closets,
records rooms, office supply rooms,
first aid rooms serving office areas,
student counseling rooms and testing
(assessment, non-health, non-
discipline-related) rooms, and open
and private (restricted, nonpublic)
circulation areas.

 
Waiting, interview, and testing spaces are
included as office service if they serve a
specific office or office area and not a
classroom laboratory or clinic. A student
counseling (non-health) testing room
should be coded as office service (315).
A receptionist room that includes a
waiting area should be coded as office,
open plan (320). Lounges that serve
specific office areas and that are not
generally available to the public should
be coded as office service (315).
320 Office, Open
Plan














 
Room configured for
occupancy by more than
four people, where activities
and routines that involve the
following tasks occur:
writing; communicating with
others in person or
electronically; small-scale
meetings with students,
colleagues, staff, and other
visitors; preparing reports,
document- and internet-
based research; developing
course materials;
conducting transactions with
members of the university
community, etc.
Office space sized and
furnished/equipped for assignment to
more than four people. A receptionist
room that includes a waiting area
should be coded here.











 
 
350 Office,
Conference Room



















 
Room serving an office
complex and used primarily
for staff meetings and unit
activities that are not directly
related to instruction.
















 
Conference space typically equipped
with tables and chairs. Normally used
by a specific organizational unit or
office area, whereas meeting rooms
(680) are used for general purposes
such as community or campus group
meetings not associated with
a particular department. If a space is
used for both conference and meeting
space functions, the space should be
classified according to its principal
use. A conference space is
distinguished from facilities such as
seminar rooms, lecture rooms, and
classrooms (110), because it is used
primarily for activities other than
scheduled classes. A conference
space is intended primarily for formal
gatherings, whereas a lounge is
intended for relaxation and casual
interaction. This category includes
teleconference spaces.
Does not include classrooms, seminar
rooms, lecture rooms (see Classrooms,
110), auditoria (see Assembly, 610),
departmental lounges (see Office
Service, 315), open lounges (see
Lounge, 650), and meeting rooms (680).















 
355 Office,
Conference Room
Services



 
Room that directly serves
one or more conference
rooms as an extension of
the activities in that room.


 
Rooms such as kitchenettes, chair
storage rooms, projection rooms
sound equipment rooms, etc. if they
serve conference rooms.


 
Does not include kitchens, dining rooms,
and similar facilities in centralized
conference-type facilities (see Meeting
Room Service, 685). Dining rooms open
to the student body at large and/or the
public are categorized as food facilities
(635).
Study Room Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
410 Reading-
Study Room











 
Room used by individuals to
study books or audiovisual
materials.










 
Rooms generally referred to as library
reading rooms, carrels, study rooms,
individual study stations, study booths,
etc. that are intended to be used for
general study purposes. Study
stations may be grouped as in a library
reading room or individualized as in a
carrel. Study stations in a reading
room may include typewriters, remote
terminals of a computer or other
electronic display equipment, etc. In
addition to libraries, reading rooms
may be found in residence halls or
academic buildings.
Does not include individual study
laboratories that are limited in use to a
particular area of study, nor classrooms,
class laboratories, special class
laboratories, non-class laboratories,
offices, sleep-study rooms in residence
halls or other housing units, waiting room,
or lounge facilities.





 
420 Library Stack
















 
Room used to house
arranged collections of
educational materials for
use as a study resource.













 
Rooms generally referred to as library
stacks in central, branch, or unit
libraries, characterized by accessible,
arranged, and managed collections.
Collections can include books,
periodicals, journals, monographs,
micro-materials, electronic storage
media (e.g., tapes, disks, slides, etc.),
music scores, maps, and other
educational materials.







 
Does not include bookshelf space in
classrooms, laboratories, or offices.
Audio-visual film and tape libraries that
generally serve groups rather than
individuals are classified as audio-visual,
radio, TV facilities (530). Separate tape
storage rooms for language laboratories
should be classified as laboratory service
(see 200 series). Separate rooms
containing musical scores, records, and
tapes are classified as stack space if the
primary purpose of the materials is for
instruction or research as in a library or
music building. Rooms containing such
materials and intended for listening
enjoyment, as in a student union, and
should be classified as recreation
facilities service (675).
430 Open Stack
Reading Room



 
Room that is a combination
of a reading area and
stacks, generally without
physical boundaries
between the stacks and
reading areas.
 Further limitations are defined under
reading-study room (410) and library
stack (420).


 
440 Processing
Room


 
Room that serves a reading-
study room, a stack, or an
open-stack reading room as
a supporting service to such
rooms.
Areas generally used to house card
catalogs, circulation desks, bookbinding,
microfilm processing, and audiovisual
record-playback equipment for
distribution to individual study stations.
Does not include such library space as
offices for staff; campus-wide or
centralized audiovisual preparation
areas; or instructional facilities for library
science staff.
455 Study Service







 
Room that directly serves
reading-study rooms,
stacks, open-stack reading
rooms, or processing rooms
as a direct extension of the
activities in those rooms.


 
Other categories in these definitions
that provide a “service” category for
each type of room. Because such
facilities are minimal in library-type
spaces, this one category of study
facility service space is provided for all
types of study facilities. Including
areas such as closets, locker space,
coat rooms, etc.
 
Special Use Room Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
510 Armory




 
Room or an area used by
ROTC units.



 
Indoor drill areas, indoor rifle ranges,
and special-purpose military science
rooms.


 
Does not include classrooms, class
laboratories, and offices in an
armory facility that are designated
as classrooms, class laboratories,
and offices (even though they are
located in an armory building).
515 Armory
Service


 
Room that directly serves an
armory facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.
 
Supply rooms, weapons rooms, coat
rooms, etc.


 
Does not include classroom service,
class laboratory service, and office
service rooms that are so classified (even
though they are located in an armory
building).
520 Athletic-
Physical
Education












 
Room used by students,
staff, or the public for
athletic-physical education
activities.











 
Rooms generally referred to as
gymnasiums, basketball courts
handball courts, squash courts,
wrestling rooms, swimming pools,
ice rinks, indoor tracks, indoor
“fields”, or field houses.









 
No distinction by room-use category is
made on the basis of instructional versus
intramural or intercollegiate use of
gymnasiums, swimming pools, etc. This
category does not include classroom
facilities, laboratory facilities, or office
facilities, even though they may be
located in an athletic building. Also not
included are spectator-seating areas,
outside fields, tennis courts, archery
ranges, etc. This category does not
include rooms used for recreational
purposes such as bowling alleys, billiards
rooms, ping-pong rooms, ballrooms,
chess rooms, card-playing rooms, or
hobby rooms.
523 Athletic-
Facilities-
Spectator Seating
Seating area used by
students, staff, or the public
to watch athletic events.
Permanent seating areas in field
houses, gymnasiums, and swimming
pools.
Does not include temporary or movable
seating areas. Stadium seating by
definition is structural area.
525 Athletic-
Physical
Education Service


 
Room that directly serves an
athletic/physical education
facility as an extension of
the activities in that facility.

 
Rooms generally referred to as
physical education locker rooms,
shower rooms, coaches’ rooms, ticket
booths, dressing rooms, equipment
supply rooms, first-aid rooms, skate
sharpening rooms, towel rooms, etc.
Does not include public toilet rooms.




 
530 Audio-Visual,
Radio, TV




 
Room used for the
production and distribution
of audiovisual, radio, and TV
materials; or the operation
of equipment for the
communication of these
materials.
Rooms generally referred to as TV
studios, radio studios, sound studios,
graphics studios, etc.



 
Does not include studios used primarily
as part of an instructional program to
train students in communications
techniques should be classified as Class
Laboratories-Wet/Dry (210/212) if
scheduled, or Special Class Laboratories
(220) if not scheduled.
535 Audio-Visual,
Radio, TV Service




 
Room that directly serves an
audiovisual, radio, or TV
facility as an extension of
the activities in that facility.


 
Rooms generally referred to as film
libraries, tape libraries, control rooms,
videotape recorder rooms, property
storage, recording rooms, engineering
maintenance rooms, darkrooms,
preparation rooms, and equipment
storage rooms.
Does not include control rooms,
recording rooms, and similar facilities
used primarily to train students in
communication techniques, which should
be classified as Class Laboratory Service
Dry/Wet (215/217) or Special Class
Laboratory Service (225).
540 Clinic
(Non-Medical)




 
Room used for the
diagnosis and/or treatment
of patients in a program
other than medical (human
or veterinary), dentistry, and
student health care.
 
Rooms generally referred to as patient
examination rooms, testing rooms,
and consultation rooms. Clinics are
typically associated with such
educational areas as psychology,
speech and hearing, remedial reading,
and remedial writing.
Does not include clinics associated with
student health care, or clinics for the
medical or dental treatment of humans or
animals.


 
545 Clinic Service
(Non-Medical)

 
Room that directly services
a clinic facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.
Waiting rooms, observation rooms,
control rooms, records rooms, etc.

 
Does not include rooms that serve health
care facilities (see 800 series).

 
550
Demonstration
Facility










 
Room or group of rooms
used to practice within an
instructional program, the
principles of certain
disciplines such as teaching,
childcare or development,
and family and consumer
science.





 
Demonstration day care and
development centers, laboratory
schools and home economics or
management houses, when these
facilities are used for practice as a part
of collegiate training or instruction.
Rooms that serve nursery,
elementary, or secondary school
students in a laboratory school or
preschool nursery. The key criterion
here is practice activity within an
instructional program that closely
simulates a real-world occupational
setting.
Does not include demonstration schools,
laboratory schools, preschool nurseries,
and home management houses in which
the students serve as the subjects for a
research study. These are not classified
as non-class laboratory. However,
classrooms or class laboratories in such
facilities used primarily for college-level
students should be classified as
classroom facilities or class laboratories.
Offices, conference rooms, and meeting
rooms used by college-level staff should
be so classified.
 
555
Demonstration
Facility Service







 
Room that directly serves a
demonstration facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.






 
Facilities generally referred to as
storerooms, laundry rooms, etc. in a
home demonstration facility; facility, or
as kitchens, lockers, shower rooms,
etc. in a laboratory school.





 
The distinction between a demonstration
facility and a demonstration facility
service is somewhat arbitrary. In general,
the primary activity areas such as
kitchens, dining rooms, living rooms (in a
home demonstration house); and
classrooms, laboratories, and
gymnasiums that serve nursery,
elementary, or secondary school
students (in a laboratory school), should
be designated as demonstration facilities.
560 Field Building













 
Barn or similar structure for
animal shelter or the
handling, storage, and/or
protection of farm products,
supplies, vehicles and tools;
or for field purposes and
experiments.







 
Barns, animal shelters, sheds, feed
units, hay storage, and seed houses.
Greenhouses related to farm operations
are included in this category.
Structures are typically of light frame
construction with unfinished interiors,
usually but not exclusively related to
agricultural field operations, and are
frequently located outside the central
campus area. Includes storage space
for farm vehicles and implements.
Service areas that support field
buildings are classified here. Also
included are such facilities as
meteorological field test stations.
Animal quarters directly supporting
research or instructional laboratories
should be coded animal quarters (570).
Location of building is not sufficient
justification for classification as a field
service facility. Finished rooms such as
endocrine research laboratories, dairy
research laboratories, etc. should be
classified as non-class laboratory (250).
Does not include buildings that house
non-agricultural or non-farm related
vehicles.


 
570 Animal
Quarters



 
Room that houses
laboratory animals
maintained by the institution
for research and/or
instruction purposes.
 
Rooms generally referred to as animal
rooms, cage rooms, stalls, wards, and
similar rooms that are used to house
animals intended for use in class
laboratories, non-class, special class,
or individual study laboratories.
Does not include areas for treatment of
veterinary patient animals (see health
care facilities-800 series). Also not
included are field buildings (560)
sheltering animals that do not directly
support instruction or research.
575 Animal
Quarters Service

 
Room that directly serves an
animal care facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.
Feed storage rooms, feed mixing
rooms, cage-washing rooms, and
similar facilities such as non-patient
surgery, casting, or instrument rooms.
Does not include areas that directly serve
areas used for the treatment of patient
animals. See health care facilities (800).
 
580 Greenhouse



 
A room, usually primarily
composed of glass or other
light transmitting material,
for the cultivation and/or
protection of plants.
Any facility serving the greenhouse
function (e.g., warehouse facilities
equipped with special lighting controls
for the cultivation of plants).
 
Does not include greenhouses related to
farm operations. Also not included are
greenhouses not used for plant
cultivation (e.g., a greenhouse used for
central storage should be coded 730).
585 Greenhouse
Service

 
Room that directly serves a
greenhouse facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.
Equipment or materials storage areas
and rooms generally referred to as
head houses.
 
Does not include greenhouses related to
farm operations, or storage areas that do
not directly serve greenhouses.
 
General Use Room Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
610 Assembly









 
Room designed and
equipped for the assembly
of many persons for events
such as dramatic, musical,
devotional, livestock
judging, or commencement
activities. The room can also
be used for instructional or
classroom activity purposes
to a minor or incidental extent.
 
Theaters, auditoriums, concert halls,
arenas, chapels, and livestock judging
pavilions that are used primarily for
general presentations (speakers),
performances (dramatic, musical,
dance), and devotional services.
Seating areas, orchestra pit, chancels,
arenas, aisles and stages (if not used
primarily for instruction) are included.
Also includes chapels located in health
care, residential, or other facilities.
Stage areas used primarily for instruction
or practice (dance, music, drama) are
typically coded separately as laboratory
space. Assembly facilities that are used
primarily as instructional lecture halls are
classified as classroom facilities.




 
615 Assembly
Service




 
Room that directly serves an
assembly facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.


 
Check rooms, coat rooms, ticket
booths, dressing rooms, projection
booths, property storage, makeup
rooms, costume and scenery shops
and storage, green rooms, multimedia
and telecommunications control
rooms, etc.
Lobbies are non-assignable space,
classified as circulation area (020). A
concession stand in an assembly facility
is classified as merchandising (660).


 
620 Exhibition











 
Room used for exhibition of
materials, works of art,
artifacts, etc., and intended
for general use by faculty,
staff, students and the
public.






 
Both unit and institution-wide
museums, galleries, and similar
exhibition areas used to display
materials and items for viewing by
both the institutional population and
the public; planetariums used
primarily for exhibition; and
Planetariums used primarily for
research, which should be classified in
the laboratory (200) series.


 
Collections that are intended only for
instructional purposes and not for general
exhibitions (e.g., unit displays of
anthropological, botanical, or geological
specimens) should be classified as
laboratory or laboratory service. Does not
include bulletin boards and similar
temporary or incidental displays in
hallways, student centers, etc., nor
collections of educational materials,
regardless of form or type (e.g., books,
study resource as opposed to exhibition
use, code library stack (420).
625 Exhibition
Service




 
Room that directly serves an
exhibition facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.


 
Work rooms, for preparation of
materials and displays, vault or other
storage for works of art, check rooms,
etc.


 
Research areas in museums are
classified as non-class laboratories (250)
or non-class laboratory service (255).
Service areas for displays that are part of
an instructional program are classified as
classroom service (115) or laboratory
service (215, 217) areas.
630 Food Facility



















 
Room used for eating food.



















 
Dining halls, cafeterias, snack bars,
restaurants, and similar eating areas,
including such areas in residence
halls, faculty clubs, etc. This category
includes facilities that are open to the
student body and/or the public at
large. The primary distinction of a food
facility area is the availability of some
form of accommodation (seating,
counters, and tables) for eating or
drinking. This is, therefore, an area
intended for the actual consumption of
food and drink. Vending areas with
seating, counters, or tables, and sit
down lunch or vending rooms that
serve a shop facility are included in
this category.



 
Vending areas not provided with seating,
counters, or tables are classified as
merchandising (660) or with the
appropriate service code if the vending
directly supports or is adjacent to a
specific room for consuming the
products.
Lounges (650) with vending machines
that are incidental to the primary use of
the room (e.g., relaxation) are coded as
part of the lounge if within the room, or as
lounge service (655) if separate from and
directly supporting the main lounge
facility. Break rooms serving specific
office areas are classified as office
service (315). Eating areas for children in
demonstration or day care facilities are
classified as primary activity categories
within these respective areas, staff-only
eating or break rooms in these facilities
are classified as service areas.
635 Food Facility
Service







 
Room that directly serves a
food facility as an extension
of the activities in that
facility.





 
Kitchens, refrigeration rooms,
freezers, dishwashing rooms, cafeteria
serving rooms, preparation rooms,
cleaning rooms, etc., including such
areas in residence halls.




 
Does not include any type of food
preparation room that does not serve a
food facility or eating area. Kitchenettes
in residence facilities that do not serve a
dining area are classified Lounge (940).
Service areas for vending rooms are
classified as merchandising service
(665). Kitchens and food preparation
areas in demonstration facilities are
classified as service areas.
640 Day Care












 
Space used to provide day
or night child or elderly adult
care as a nonmedical
service to members of the
institutional community.








 
All primary activity spaces that provide
oversight, supervision, developmental
training, and general personal care for
assigned children or adults (e.g., play
areas, non-staff eating areas, and
child training spaces). This type of
facility serves as a central service
center for faculty, staff, and students,
with members of the community being
served, as needed. This is not a
medical care facility (i.e., medical
attention is strictly limited to
maintaining prescribed medication
schedules and providing first aid).
Does not include support spaces (e.g.,
storage rooms, closets, and pantries)
typically used as service spaces (see
Day Care Service-645); demonstration
houses, laboratory schools, or other
facilities with a primary function of
providing practice for postsecondary
students as part of the instructional
process; or service areas classified as
Central Service (750), and Laboratory
Facilities (Code 200 series) that directly
support instruction (e.g., vocational
training programs for parent education
and early childhood education).
645 Day Care
Service







 
Space that directly serves a
primary activity space in a
day care facility as an
extension of the activities in
that space.




 
Storage rooms, closets, kitchens or
food preparation areas, pantries,
private or staff-only eating areas and
rest rooms, and other typical service
spaces that support a primary activity
area.



 
Does not include those spaces (e.g.,
child training spaces, playrooms-see day
Care-640) where primary day care
activities are conducted. Rest rooms
designed for child training should be
coded Day Care (640). Eating or training
areas for children are classified as
primary Day Care (640) activity space.
Staff office areas should be coded as
Office (310).
650 Lounge








































 
Room used for rest and
relaxation that is not
restricted to a specific group
of people, unit, or area.





































 
Rooms typically equipped comfortably
and may include vending machines. A
general use lounge differs from an
office area by virtue of its public
availability. If a room is used by people
visiting or passing through a building
or area, it is coded here. Such a room
may have vending machines if the
primary use of the room is rest,
relaxation, and informal socializing
rather than for eating.






























 
A lounge is distinguished from a
conference room and a meeting room by
its informal atmosphere and its greater
general public availability. A lounge area
associated with a toilet is non-assignable
space and classified as toilet area. A
room devoted wholly to vending
machines without accommodation
(seating, counters, or tables) for local
food or drink consumption is classified as
a merchandising facility (660). A lounge
that directly serves a specific or restricted
area is classified by the appropriate
corresponding service code (e.g., lounge
serving an assembly is classified 615
assembly service) a lounge differs from a
lobby (non-assignable circulation area
024) in placement, use, and intent.
Generally, a lobby is located at a major
entrance, with openings to hallways on
more than one side; and although it may
have seating furniture, it is designed
more for walking through or having
standing conversations than for sitting
and relaxing. Separate waiting rooms in
other than health care facilities are
classified with the appropriate service
code according to the room or area they
serve. A receptionist room that includes a
waiting area should be classified as an
office (see 300 series). Public waiting
areas in health care facilities are coded
as public waiting (880).
In residential facilities - a standalone
room off a corridor or combined with
other rooms behind a secured access
corridor that serves as a gathering or
study location, and separate food
preparation rooms limited to the facility
occupants that do not directly serve
dining services should be coded to 940
Lounge (Closed access for housing only).
655 Lounge
Service
 
Room that directly serves a
general use lounge facility.
 
Kitchenettes, storage areas, and
vending rooms that directly serve a
general use lounge facility.
Does not include kitchenettes, storage
rooms, and small vending areas that
directly serve other room types.
660
Merchandising
Facilities











 
Room used to sell products
or services.












 
Bookstores, barbershops, post offices,
dairy stores, student union desks, and
vending machine areas devoted
wholly to vending machines.










 
Does not include dining rooms,
restaurants, snack bars, and similar food
facilities. A vending machine room that
directly serves a dining, lounge, or other
primary activity area is classified with the
appropriate service code; a vending
machine area within a general use
lounge is included in the lounge (650)
space. Vending areas that include
accommodations (seating, counters, or
tables) for consuming the products are
classified as food facility (630). Cashiers’
desks that serve a specific recreational
facility or area are classified as service
space for that area.
665
Merchandising
Facilities Service


 
Room that directly serves a
merchandising facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.

 
Storage rooms and closets, sorting
rooms, private restrooms, and other
support rooms if they directly serve a
merchandising (660) facility.

 
Storage rooms, sorting rooms, and
private rest rooms that do not directly
serve a merchandising area should be
classified using the appropriate service
code for the corresponding room use
type.
670 Recreation













 
Room used by students,
staff, and/or the public for
recreational purposes.











 
Bowling alleys, pool and billiard
rooms, ping pong rooms, ballrooms,
chess rooms, card-playing rooms
(non-instructional), music listening
rooms, and hobby rooms. Recreation
rooms are used for relaxation and
amusement-type activities, whereas
athletic-physical education (520)
facilities are typically used for the
more vigorous pursuits within the
physical education, intercollegiate
athletics, and intramural programs.


 
Gymnasiums, basketball courts, handball
courts, squash courts, wrestling rooms,
swimming pools, ice rinks, indoor tracks,
indoor fields, or field houses that should
be classified as athletic/physical
education facilities. Does not include
outdoor facilities such as tennis courts,
archery ranges, fields (football, hockey,
etc.) or golf courses. Does not include
bowling alleys, dance rooms, or any other
activity areas that are primarily used for
instruction. Reading or media use rooms
that are designed and intended as study
rooms are also excluded from this
category.
675 Recreation
Service





 
Room that directly serves a
recreation facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.



 
Storage closets, equipment issue
rooms, cashiers’ desks, first aid, and
other support areas that directly serve
a recreation (670) facility.



 
Does not include kitchens, short-order
kitchens, snack bars, or other food
facilities (630) and food facility service
(635) areas. Does not include
athletic/physical education facility
service such as locker rooms, ticket
booths, dressing rooms, and other
similar service areas.
680 Meeting
Room

























 
Room used for a variety of
non-class meetings.

























 
Rooms used by groups for general
purposes such as student senate,
student government, community
groups, and short-term meetings
conducted by an extension division.
The key concept here is public
availability. Conference rooms (350)
are often confused with meeting rooms
because they are both primarily used
for non-class meetings. However,
conference rooms are restricted
service components of an office
complex or used by office occupants
of a specific area and are generally
limited to staff meetings or other unit
non-class activities. Although it may
be assigned to a specific
organizational unit, a meeting room
is more available and open to various
groups. Meeting rooms may be
configured like classrooms (i.e., with
participant focus to the front of the
room), and may be equipped with a
variety of furniture types (e.g., tables
and chairs, lounge type furniture,
tablet armchairs, or a large table) in
various combinations and
arrangements.
Rooms serving an office complex and
used primarily for staff meetings are
classified as conference rooms.
Instructional rooms used primarily for
scheduled classes are classified as
classroom (see 100 series) facilities.
Rooms designed and equipped for the
assembly of many persons for such
events as dramatic, musical, or
devotional activities, etc., should be
classified as assembly (610).
















 
685 Meeting
Room Service

 
Room serves a meeting
room as an extension of the
activities in that room.
 
Kitchenettes, multimedia storage and
control rooms, furniture storage
rooms, and other support rooms that
directly serve a meeting room.
Does not include kitchenettes, storage
rooms, and other support areas that
serve conference rooms (355) or
assembly facilities (615).
690 Locker Room


 
Room used for changing
clothes and/or storing
personal materials.
 
Service rooms intended for student
and/or staff use principally for storage
of clothing and/or individual materials,
(e.g., Physical plant locker rooms).
Does not include physical education or
intercollegiate athletics locker rooms and
areas. These should be coded athletic
physical education service (525).
Supporting Room Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
710 Data
Processing-
Computer







































 
Room used as a computer
based data processing or
telecommunications center
with applications that are
broad enough to serve the
overall administrative or
academic primary
equipment needs of a
central group of users, unit,
college, school, or entire
institution.































 
Central rooms housing computer or
computers (e.g., large mainframe,
minicomputers, etc.), peripheral input
(e.g., data entry terminals, input tape or
disk drives, data reading equipment,
etc.), or output (e.g., printers, output
tape or disk drives, etc.) devices. This
category also includes rooms in a
central computer complex that are
primarily or exclusively dedicated to
data or program code entry or job
submissions through one or more
terminals. A central computer or
telecommunications room may be one
of a group or rooms that constitute a
center for delivering computer-based
data processing or telecommunications
services to various levels of user
groups. Although the ongoing primary
activity of this category is tied more
closely to equipment than human
activity, these areas require technical
support staff, and physical access may
be restricted to these personnel. These
central equipment rooms appear most
frequently at the campus-wide and
large organizational unit levels and are
generally subject to environmental and
security controls and procedures
limiting users to electronic terminal, 
telephone or modem access.
Also included are computer and
network-based telecommunications
equipment rooms, ranging from micro
driven LAN (local area) to the larger
PBX (private bench) network centers,
including central rooms housing
satellite signal reception or
transmission equipment. This
equipment may be dedicated to data,
audio or telephone, video or any
combination of these electronic
transmissions.
Does not include office space assigned to
programmers, analysts, engineers, data
entry personnel, and other technical staff,
even though these rooms usually contain
an access terminal. This also does not
include instructional laboratories and
study rooms equipped with personal
computers or terminals (see 200 series),
or offices with data processing equipment
used as office tools. Personal computer
or terminal workrooms and printer rooms
that serve an office area should be coded
office service (315). Small closet areas
housing reception or distribution
telecommunications equipment and
wiring that are not used by technical or
support staff on a regular basis (i.e.,
repair or modification only) should be
classified as central computer service
(715).






















 
715 Data
Processing-
Computer Service
















 
Room that directly serves a
central computer or
telecommunications facility
as an extension of the
activities in that facility.














 
Such rooms as paper and forms
storage; off-line tape and disk storage;
separate control or console rooms or
booths; tool and parts rooms; bursting
and decollating rooms; areas used to
store only inactive support equipment
(e.g., multiplexers, modems, spoolers,
etc.); and separate areas used for
delivering tapes or picking up printouts.
Also included are the repair and
assembly rooms that directly serve the
central computer or telecommunications
facility. Small closet areas housing 
reception or distribution
telecommunications equipment and
wiring that are not used by technical or
support staff on a regular basis (i.e.,
repair or modification only) should be
classified here.
 
Does not include office areas for
personnel (e.g., technicians, engineers,
analysts, programmers) assigned to the
central computer facility; primary
equipment (computer, i/o device) rooms;
office areas containing data processing
or networking office equipment or
materials; or rooms directly supporting
study rooms or laboratories (see 200
series) that contain special computer
equipment used for study, instruction,
or research. A nonoffice workroom
containing a remote printer or data/job
entry terminal that is part of an office
area, and not the central computer
facility, should be coded office service
(315). A printer room serving a general
purpose terminal room in a dormitory
should be classified as study service
(455).
720 Shop




















 
Room used for the
manufacture, repair, or
maintenance of products or
equipment.

















 
Carpenter shops, plumbing shops,
electrical shops, painting shops, and
similar physical plant maintenance
facilities. It also includes central printing
and duplicating shops.
















 
Does not include instructional shops,
industrial arts and vocation-technical
shops used for instruction, which should
be classified as class laboratories (see
200 series). Blueprint storage rooms are
classified as office service (315).
Small, incidental equipment repair,
assembly, or cleaning rooms that
directly serve an adjacent or nearby
primary activity room should be classified
according to the appropriate
corresponding service code. Does not
include areas used for repair and
maintenance of institution-owned
vehicles, which should be coded as
vehicle storage service (745), or costume
and scene “shops” serving theatre areas,
which should be coded as assembly
service (615). Greenhouses used for
campus physical maintenance or
improvements should be coded as
greenhouse (580).
725 Shop Service







 
Room that directly serves a
shop facility as an
extension of the activities in
that facility.




 
Tool-supply storage, materials storage,
and similar equipment or material
supply and/or storage. Locker, shower
and lunchrooms, and similar non-public
areas that serve the shop facility should
be included.


 
Does not include service areas related to
class or non-class laboratories, or
vehicular repair facilities (garages), which
should be classified as vehicle-storage
facility service (745). Blueprint storage
rooms should be classified as office
service (315). Sit-down lunch or vending
rooms that serve a shop facility are
classified food facility (630).
730 Central
Storage




















 
Room or building used to
store materials or
equipment that serves
multiple room use
categories, organizational
units, or buildings.
















 
Central storage facility (warehouse)
and inactive unit storage. The concept
of central or general is the key to
applying this code correctly. The vast
majority of storage rooms on campus
are service rooms that directly support
a primary activity room or room group:
for example, a paper storage room,
office service (315) can serve several
offices in an area. Service storage
rooms are somewhat close to the areas
they serve and are used more than
occasionally. Storage areas include
areas commonly called surplus storage,
central campus supply, or warehouses.
It also includes storage rooms in a
building or building area that serve
multiple room use categories and that
are used for general or surplus (e.g.,
furniture, equipment) collection storage.
The 730 code can usually be used for
all storage areas that do not qualify as
service rooms.
Storage related to other types of space
follows the classification of that type of
space with a “service” designation. For
example, a storage closet for office
supplies is classified as office service
(315). The distinction between the
“service” and “storage” classification rests
on the possibility of physical separation of
the materials stored. If the materials
being stored could be placed in a
warehouse, implying only occasional
demand for the materials, then storage
facility is the appropriate classification. 
Storage that must be close at hand
because of the nature of the materials
stored, and the demands placed upon
them by the program, should be
classified in the appropriate “service”
category. Offices within warehouses or
other central storage buildings are coded
as the appropriate office (see 300 series).

 
735 Central
Storage Service







 
Space that directly serves a
central storage facility as
an extension of the
activities in that facility.





 
Central storage service spaces are
typically limited to support rooms
associated with the transporting of
materials in and out of large central
storage facilities and warehouses.
Storage spaces for hand trucks and
other moving equipment, shelving
storage, and other spaces supporting
the central storage function are
included.
Only those spaces directly supporting the
(usually) larger Central Storage (730)
area should be classified with this code.






 
740 Vehicle
Storage




 
Room or structure used to
house or store vehicles.




 
Structures, buildings, and rooms
generally called garages, boathouses,
and airplane hangars. The definition of
“vehicle” is broadly interpreted here to
include forklifts, moving equipment and
other powered transport devices or
equipment.
Does not include unroofed surface
parking lots. It also does not include
structures that house or store farm
vehicles and implements, which should
be code field building (560).

 
745 Vehicle
Storage Service



 
Room that directly serves a
vehicle storage facility as
an extension of the
activities in that facility.

 
Any rooms directly serving a vehicle
storage facility, such as storage rooms
and areas used for maintenance and
repair of automotive equipment, boats,
airplanes and other vehicles as defined
in vehicle storage (740).
Does not include shops as defined in
shop (720) (e.g., carpenter, plumbing
electrical, painting, etc.). Offices within a
vehicle storage facility should be
classified as offices (300 series). 
 
750 Central
Services









 
Central room for the
processing and storage of
foods used in food facilities
or a central laundry room
used for cleaning, washing,
drying and ironing linens,
uniforms, etc.




 
Food storage areas, lockers, cold
rooms, refrigerators, meat processing
areas, and similar facilities located in a
central food storage building. Also,
laundry, drying, and ironing rooms
located in a central laundry building.





 
Offices and conference rooms located in
a central food-storage or laundry building
are classified as offices and conference
rooms (300 series). Food storage areas,
freezers, lockers, etc. not located in a
central food storage facility are classified
as food facility service (635). Laundry
rooms serving a single building are
classified as service types for the kind of
room they support, such as Sleep-Study
Service (935), Athletics PE Service (525),
or Health Care Service (895).

Note: The Health Care Room Space category includes the room uses listed below that are in student health facilities, health professions clinics, and in hospitals. The codes and definitions in this series are designed to describe health care facilities for humans as well as animals requiring health care. This category does not include non-medical clinic facilities. Offices that serve in health care activities are classified as offices.

Health Care Room Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
810 Patient
Bedroom






 
Room equipped with a bed
and used for patient care.






 
General nursing care, acute care,
semi-convalescent/rehabilitative adult
or pediatric bedrooms, intensive care
units, progressive coronary care units,
emergency bed care units, observation
units, infant care nurseries,
incubator units, wards, etc. Connected
clothes closets are included. Stalls for
animal patients are also included.
Does not include student residence
quarters (see 900 series). Staff on-call
rooms for resting should be coded staff
on-call (890). Also does not include non-
patient animal shelters for farm animals,
code field building (560) or non-veterinary
school laboratory animals, which should
be coded as animal quarters (570).
 
820 Patient Bath
 
Room containing patient
bath and toilet facilities.
Toilet/bath facilities adjoining or in
conjunction with patient bedrooms.
Public toilet facilities are excluded.
 
830 Nurse Station




 
Room or area used by
nurses who are supervising
and/or administering health
care.

 
Areas devoted to records charting,
reception desks, admissions desks,
and areas adjoining nurses stations,
such as utility rooms, work-storage
areas, formula preparation areas,
medication areas, etc.
Rooms that can be identified as offices
should be classified as such.



 
840 Surgery











 
Room used for surgery.











 
Major and minor surgery rooms,
delivery rooms, special-procedures
operating rooms, and rooms used in
conjunction with and as a direct
extension of the activities of a
surgery room, such as labor rooms,
recovery rooms, monitoring/
observation rooms, special support
equipment rooms (e.g., anesthesia,
heart, lung, x-ray, etc.), dictation
booths, scrub-up areas, instrument
cleanup and storage, gurney
storage, sterile supplies storage.
 
850 Health
Treatment









 
Room used for diagnostic
and therapeutic treatment.









 
Rooms used for radiology, fluoroscopy
angiography, physical therapy, dialysis,
cardiac catheterization, pulmonary
function, vascular testing, EEG, ECG,
EMG, combination doctor’s offices
and examination/ treatment rooms,
and rooms that support treatment
rooms as a direct extension of the
activities of a facility, such as
dressing rooms, film processing
and viewing rooms, work preparation
rooms, special equipment storage.
 
855 Hospital
Patient Isolation

 
Room used to seclude
patients.

 
Human and animal patient rooms such
as those found in The Ceriale Center
for Cornell Health and the Veterinary
Medical Center.
Plant isolation rooms are coded as
laboratories.

 
860 Health
Service
Laboratory









 
Room used to provide
diagnostic support services
to health care facilities.









 
Rooms generally referred to as
pathology labs, pharmacy labs,
autopsy labs, etc., such as
hematology, chemistry tissue,
bacteriology serology, blood bank,
nasal metabolism, isotope rooms, and
rooms that serve service laboratories
as a direct extension of the activities of
such a facility, such as rooms
generally referred to as cadaver
storage morgue, autoclave and
centrifuge rooms, warm and cold
rooms.
Does not include class laboratories,
special class laboratories, or other
facilities used primarily for organized
instruction.








 
870 Health
Supplies






 
Room used to store supplies
for health care facilities.






 
Central supply, pharmacy supplies/
storage dispensary, miscellaneous
storage of a relatively inactive nature,
other than that included in other
primary and service room types.



 
Does not include central storage areas
for materials or equipment not directly
health-care-related (e.g., furniture, office
equipment); such areas should be
classified central storage (730). Linen
closets that serve nurse stations and
other limited scope service areas should
be classified with the appropriate service
code.
880 Health Public
Waiting
 
Room used by the public to
await admission, treatment,
or information.
Lobbies, waiting and reception areas,
visiting areas, and viewing areas.
 
Lounges are excluded from this category.

 
890 Staff On-Call







 
Rooms used by health care
staff to rest or sleep while
on-call to assigned duties
within a health care facility.




 
Rooms used by doctors, nurses,
emergency medical technicians, flight
care crews, etc., to rest or sleep while
on-call to specific duties within the
facility.



 
Bedrooms for patients should be coded
patient bedroom (810); student residence
quarters should be classified with the
residential facilities (see 900 series)
codes. Staff on-call (890) rooms differ
from open and service area lounges
(650), in that specific provisions are
made for sleeping, and use is restricted
to staff who typically work a long shift.
895 Health Care
Service

 
Rooms used by
Housekeeping, linen storage,
and handling.
 
Rooms used by housekeeping staff for
storerooms, closets, locker rooms,
etc., for building maintenance and
operation.
Non-assignable areas are explicitly
excluded from this category. Excluded
are mechanical and equipment areas.
 
Residential Room Space
AREAUSE/DEFINITIONINCLUDESLIMITATIONS/COMMENTS
910 Single
Bedroom

 
A residential room for one
individual typically furnished
with a bed, without an
internally connected bath.
A single bedroom may be a
standalone room off a corridor or
combined with other rooms with
access through a secured corridor.
Does not include study rooms (410).


 
919 Toilet-Bath-
Shower



 
Toilet and/or bathroom
and/or shower stall intended
to be used only by the
occupants of the residential
facilities, rather than by the
general public.
Common or shared bathroom facilities
that may consist of full or half-baths,
showers or toilet and shower
combinations, used by the residents,
and accessible from a corridor or other
general circulation area.
Does not include public toilets (031) or
private toilets (032) in public areas of
residential facilities or non-residential
facilities.

 
935 Closet





 
Room (or group of rooms)
that directly serve the
occupants of sleep-study
rooms.


 
Rooms that directly service rooms
coded Single Bedroom (910)
residential facilities. Rooms referred to
as mail rooms, laundry and pressing
rooms, linen closets, maid rooms,
serving rooms, trunk storage, and
telephone rooms.
Does not include offices (see 300
series), lounges (650), lounges (940),
reading-study rooms (410), or meeting
rooms (680) in any residential facility,
including institutionally controlled hotels
or motels.
 
940 Lounge
(Closed access
for housing only)



 
A study and/or food space
limited to occupants of a
residential facility.



 
A standalone room off a corridor or
combined with other rooms behind a
secured access corridor that serves as
a gathering or study location, and
separate food preparation rooms
limited to the facility occupants that do
not directly serve dining services.
Residential quarters equipped with
internal cooking facilities are coded
Apartment (950). Food preparation
areas that are open to larger campus
populations are coded Food Facility
(630).
 
943 Shared
Bedroom 
(double or more)

 
Room occupied by more
than one individual typically
furnished with beds,
wardrobes, closets, desks,
and chairs.
Suite includes multiple occupancy
bedrooms exclusively for residential
use.

 
Single bedroom (910) and their
corresponding external toilet-bath-
shower (919) rooms are coded
separately.
 
950 Apartment
Space














 
Living room, kitchen,
bedroom, bathroom,
hallway, or vestibule of a
living unit, complete with
private cooking facilities.











 
Living/recreational space in a basic
module or group of rooms designed as
a complete housekeeping unit which
may, i.e., contains bedroom(s), living
room(s), kitchen, and toilet facilities.
This room type fits within a category
that includes apartments provided for
faculty, staff, or students. Also, laundry
rooms, mail rooms, linen closets, maid
rooms, trunk-storage rooms,
telephone rooms, and weight or
exercise rooms that serve apartment
facilities. Apartment service facilities
may be in a separate building that
serves an apartment complex.
Apartments need not be in a
residential building.
Does not include single freestanding
structures coded house (970) or any
residential units that do not contain
private cooking facilities.












 
970 House















 
Space in a free-standing
house.














 
Basic module or group of rooms
designed as a complete housekeeping
room(s), kitchen, and toilet facilities. It
is not intended that individual rooms
be specifically identified within the
structure, but only that the total interior
area be accounted for. This category
includes houses provided for faculty,
staff, or students.







 
Houses and other residential properties
that are owned or controlled by an
institution as commercial investments,
and that do not serve the institution’s
primary missions, are often excluded
from the formally coded facilities
inventory. Also not included are
complete living units that are part of a
larger structure, which should be coded
as apartment space (950). Houses used
as office areas should be classified with
the office facilities (see 300 series) 
codes. Note: If the house is a Campus
Life unit or is used as office space, each
of the rooms of the house must be
inventoried. For clarification or further
details, contact Facilities Inventory.

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