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Suggested Citation:"Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Laboratory Design, Construction, and Renovation: Participants, Process, and Product. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9799.
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Bibliography

American Chemical Society (ACS). 1993. Less Is Better: Laboratory Chemical Waste Management for Waste Reduction, 2nd Ed. Task Force on Laboratory Waste Management, Department of Government Relations and Science Policy. Washington, D.C.: ACS.

American Institute of Architects (AIA). 1993. The Architect's Handbook of Professional Practice, Vol. 2, 12th Ed. Washington, D.C.: AIA.

American Institute of Architects (AIA). 1999. Guidelines for Planning and Design of Biomedical Research Laboratory Facilities, Washington, D.C.: AIA.

Ashbrook, Peter C., and Malcolm M. Renfrew 1991. Safe Laboratories. New York: Lewis Publishers.


Baum, Janet S. 1995. "Renovate Your Lab." Chemical Health and Safety, May/June, 2:7–13.

Baum, Janet S. 1997. "Designing Chemical Laboratories." Chemical Health and Safety, March/April, 4:21–25

Baum, Janet S. 1998. "Building Safety From the Ground Up." Chemical Health and Safety, May/June, 5:11–14.

Bender, R. 1996. "Benchmarking Costs for Pharmaceutical Facilities." Pharmaceutical Engineering. Vol. 16, No. 6:28–34.

Braybrook, Susan, ed. 1986. Design for Research: Principles of Laboratory Design. New York: John Wiley & Sons.


Cooper, Crawley. 1994. Laboratory Design Handbook. Boston: CRC Press.


DiBerardinis, Louis, Janet Baum, Melvin W. First, Gad T. Gatwood, Edward Groden, and Anand K. Seth. 1993. Guidelines for Laboratory Design. New York: John Wiley & Sons.


Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). 1998. EPA Facilities Manual, Vols. 1–4. Office of Administration and Resources Management. Washington, D.C.: EPA.


Griffin, Brian B. 1998. Laboratory Design Guide. Boston: Architectural Press.


Mayer, Leonard. 1995. Design and Planning of Research and Clinical Laboratory Facilities. New York: John Wiley & Sons.

Muskat, Carl. 1993. "Estimating Lab Construction Costs." R&D Magazine, February, p. 99.


Narum, Jeanne. 1995. Structures for Science, Vol. 3. Washington, D.C.: Project Kaleidoscope.

Suggested Citation:"Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Laboratory Design, Construction, and Renovation: Participants, Process, and Product. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9799.
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National Institutes of Health (NIH). 1998. Research Laboratory: NIH Design Policies and Guidelines. Bethesda, Md.: Division of Engineering Services, National Institutes of Health. Available online at http://des.od.nih.gov

National Research Council (NRC). 1930. Laboratory Construction and Equipment. New York: Chemical Foundation.

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National Research Council (NRC). 1987. Post-Occupancy Evaluation Practices in the Building Process. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

National Research Council (NRC). 1990. Committing to the Cost of Ownership—Maintenance and Repair of Public Buildings. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

National Research Council (NRC). 1991. Pay Now or Pay Later: Controlling Costs of Ownership from Design Throughout the Service Life of Public Buildings. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

National Research Council (NRC). 1993. The Fourth Dimension in Building: Strategies for Minimizing Obsolescence. Donald G. Iselin and Andrew K.C. Lemer, eds. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

National Research Council (NRC). 1995. Prudent Practices in the Laboratory: Handling and Disposal of Chemicals. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

National Research Council (NRC). 1996. Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.

National Science Foundation (NSF). 1992. Planning Academic Research Facilities: A Guidebook. Washington, D.C.: NSF.

New York Times. 1999. Pfizer Abandons Plan to Build Lab at UConn. August 8, p. 33.

Piller, Charles. 1991. The Fail-Safe Society: Community Defiance and the End of Technological Optimism, especially "Biomedical Research and the Nightmare in Laurel Heights," pp. 118–157. New York: Basic Books.

Popper, Frank. 1991. "LULUs and Their Blockage: The Nature of the Problem, The Outline of the Solutions." pp. 13–30 in Confronting Regional Challenges: Approaches to LULUs, Growth, and Other Vexing Governance Problems. Joseph DiMento and LeRoy Graymer, eds. Cambridge: Lincoln Institute of Land Policy.


Richmond, J.Y., and R.W. McKinney. 1993. Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories. 3rd Edition. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, CDC/NIH. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.

Roseland, Sigurd J. 1987. The Chemical Laboratory: Its Design and Operations. Park Ridge, N.J.: Noyes Publications.

Ruys, Theodorus, ed. 1990. Handbook of Facilities Planning, Vol. 1, Laboratory Facilities. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.


Siegel, L.H., and D. Roth. 1995. Research Laboratory VA Design Guide. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Available online at <http://www.va.gov:80/facmgt/standard/dguide/lab/lab01.pdf>.

Stark, Stanley, ed. 1994. Research Facilities of the Future. New York: New York Academy of Sciences. (Out of print.)

Studt, Tim, ed. 1996. "Laboratory Design." Special Supplement to R&D Magazine (May). Des Plaines, Illinois: Cahners.

Suggested Citation:"Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Laboratory Design, Construction, and Renovation: Participants, Process, and Product. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9799.
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Page 125
Suggested Citation:"Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Laboratory Design, Construction, and Renovation: Participants, Process, and Product. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/9799.
×
Page 126
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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.

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