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Louismark  
#1 Posted : 26 March 2013 13:58:44(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Louismark

Does anybody to a standard or guidelines that indicate the space required per student in a lecture room. the students are using a small tables and chairs.

The rule of thumb we use is 2m squared. Correct me if I am wrong.
james fleming  
#2 Posted : 26 March 2013 15:04:05(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
james fleming

Workplace room / space is covered at Regulation 10 of the Workplace (Health and Safety Welfare) Regulations 1992.

Have a look and you’ll see the numbers. However, rooms being used for lectures are not included.

http://books.hse.gov.uk/...alogueCode=9780717604135
messyshaw  
#3 Posted : 26 March 2013 15:48:51(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
messyshaw

Louismark: From a fire safety point of view you appear to be spot on:

Table 10 of BS9999 (COP for fire safety in the design, management & use of buildings) says 2m2 per person for classrooms.
Jane Blunt  
#4 Posted : 27 March 2013 06:22:41(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Jane Blunt

A classroom and a lecture room are fundamentally different. A lecture room has people packed in more like a cinema or theatre.
Barnaby again  
#5 Posted : 27 March 2013 10:52:11(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Barnaby again

It’s a long time since I’ve had any involvement with any of this and probably there will have been changes in line with ‘reducing the regulation and bureaucracy around school premises’.

But maybe ‘Building Bulletin 98: Briefing Framework for Secondary School Projects’ a revision of BB82: Area Guidelines for Schools (Secondary section)’ will provide some guidance:

http://media.education.g...%20school%20projects.pdf

For example, ‘Figure C.4: size of teaching spaces’ may be useful. Eg the graph suggests for a ‘standard classroom’ with 20 students between 1.9 and 2.2 M squared per student.
ptaylor14  
#6 Posted : 27 March 2013 11:55:18(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
ptaylor14

Louismark wrote:
Does anybody to a standard or guidelines that indicate the space required per student in a lecture room. the students are using a small tables and chairs.

The rule of thumb we use is 2m squared. Correct me if I am wrong.

i use the workplace regs ACOP but as another poster has stated lecture theatres are different in regard to access and egress.
We also have a class cohoert policy so class sizes cannot be above a certain amount of students
Jane Blunt  
#7 Posted : 27 March 2013 12:44:52(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Jane Blunt

The use of the word 'lecture' suggests tertiary education rather than secondary.

I am in tertiary education. We have a lecture theatre that can take 450 people. It's laid out like a cinema.

Other teaching areas, where students are expected to move around while doing their work, allow much more space per student.
bob youel  
#8 Posted : 27 March 2013 13:33:45(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
bob youel

and dont forget the need to comply with the Equality Act and the RR[FS]O
User is suspended until 03/02/2041 16:40:57(UTC) Ian.Blenkharn  
#9 Posted : 27 March 2013 19:08:56(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Ian.Blenkharn

Whatever you think is the 'official' requirement don't overlook that necessity that the diversity of approaches to teaching may require, at different times, bringing students together into close groups leaving more than half a room empty with a largish huddle at one end.

Consider also that teaching labs, and I suppose workrooms for non-science teaching will be managed completely differently compared to the work to be undertaken.

And lastly, don't irritate the socks off academics with whatever fixed ratios of space without considering the need for examination space where there is an obvious need to move students farther apart than might normally be the case. When I supervise exams that have to be spread between a dining hall and the students union bar I get more than a bit tetchy toward those who designed the University and leave me pacing up and down the rows to the smell of stale beer!
Louismark  
#10 Posted : 28 March 2013 07:15:31(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Louismark

Where I work which is University (Malta) we have both lecture theaters / rooms that take a stipulated number since these have fixed seating. The issue is when you have a table and chair setup. We try to establish the number of students per room but sometimes through the academic year the number change but still overcrowding cannot be permitted since it has its after affects although we tend to emphasis on the maintenance of the ventilation systems we have installed but still there is a limit for everything. One tries to allocate rooms according to numbers but many of the times student numbers tend to change not like practicals in labs which have a stable number of students.
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