Clean laboratory interior design floor plan
Cleanrooms typically consist of three sections: the clean area, the semi-clean area, and the support area.
Cleanroom layouts can be designed in the following ways:
Perimeter corridor: The corridors can have windows or not, serving both as a place for visitors and for placing some equipment. Some are equipped with heating inside the corridor. The exterior windows must be double-sealed.
Inner-corridor style: The cleanroom is situated on the perimeter, while the corridor is inside. This type of corridor usually has a higher cleanliness level, often equal to that of the cleanroom.
Two-side design: Clean area on one side, with semi-clean and auxiliary rooms on the other.
Core-based: To save land and shorten pipeline lengths, the clean area can be centered, surrounded by various auxiliary buildings and concealed pipelines on all sides. This approach avoids the impact of outdoor climate on the clean area, reducing energy consumption for heating and cooling, and is conducive to energy conservation.



