Laboratory facilities are complex, technically sophisticated, and mechanically intensive structures that are expensive to build and to maintain. Hundreds of decisions must be made before and during new construction or renovation that will determine how successfully the facility will function when completed and how successfully it can be maintained once put into service.
This book provides guidance on effective approaches for building laboratory facilities in the chemical and biochemical sciences. It contains both basic and laboratory-specific information addressed to the user community—the scientists and administrators who contract with design and construction experts. The book will also be important to the design and construction communities—the architects, laboratory designers, and engineers who will design the facility and the construction personnel who will build it—to help them communicate with the scientific community for whom they build laboratory facilities.
Table of Contents
Front Matter
Executive Summary
1 Human Issues
2 Process Issues
3 Technical Issues
Bibliography
Appendix A Biographical Sketches of Committee Members
Appendix B Statement of Task
Appendix C Committee Meetings
Appendix D Selection of a Design Professional
Appendix E Definitions
Index
Color Figures