

Conference spaces 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). Limitations: This category does not include Conference Rooms (350), Meeting Rooms (680), Auditoria (610), or Class Laboratories (210).A classroom may be furnished with special equipment (e.g., globes, pianos, maps, computers, network connections) 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. These spaces may contain multimedia or telecommunications equipment. 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 be called lecture rooms, lecture-demonstration rooms, seminar rooms, and general purpose classrooms. Description: Includes rooms or spaces generally used for scheduled instruction that require no special, restrictive equipment or configuration.Definition: 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.These extension codes should be capable of aggregation to total Classroom Facilities (100) as needed. Institutions may use extension codes to distinguish control over classroom areas, discipline use, type of instruction, contained equipment, or other classroom variables (e.g., Codes 120 and 125, Departmental Classroom and Departmental Classroom Service). For treatment of such space, see Laboratory Facilities (Code 200 series). A classroom may contain various types of instructional aids or equipment (e.g., multimedia or telecommunications equipment) as long as they do not tie the room to instruction in a specific subject or discipline. Total classroom facilities include any support rooms that serve the classroom activity (e.g., Codes 110 and 115 as defined below). The term “classroom” includes not only general purpose classrooms, but also lecture halls, recitation rooms, seminar rooms, and other spaces used primarily for scheduled nonlaboratory instruction. This category aggregates classroom facilities as an institution-wide resource, even though these areas may fall under different levels of organizational control. 4.3.1 Space Use Codes: Definitions, Descriptions, and Limitations
