Dear Kari,

I once made a spreadsheet (in feet and in meters) to calculate how many
people will fit into a given space.

You can find it on my website:
http://auryn.nl/eng/requirements.html

Have fun with it.

Koos

-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: oslist-boun...@lists.openspacetech.org
[mailto:oslist-boun...@lists.openspacetech.org] Namens Michael M Pannwitz
Verzonden: dinsdag 19 maart 2013 15:51
Aan: World wide Open Space Technology email list
Onderwerp: Re: [OSList] What are your thoughts on venue size selection?

This is great stuff, Gerard and reminds me of one thing I forgot:
I have never accepted an os-contract without having seen the space... 
even if it was in Paris, Wuerzburg, Sevilla... and weeks or months before.
BUT I did agree to some ost-trainings (Karachi in Pakistan, Levov in 
Ukraine) and one event in the outskirts of Nairobi in Kenya... but only 
under the condition of arriving several days in advance AND it was 
always necessary (in Ukraine the rooms were under construction when we 
arrived!!)... of course, the open space gods saved the day every time.

Have a great day
mmp

On 19.03.2013 13:59, Gerard Muller wrote:
> Dear Kari,
>
> I have found the following rule of thumb in general useful.
>
> 1.  Two square meters per participant is minimum to have both opening,
closing and discussions in one room. So 100 sq m means maximum 50
participants.
> 2.  One and a half meters per participant to have opening and closing, but
space outside the room needed for discussion groups-
>
> The above assumes that:
> - 100 square meters is 100 real square meters. Some locations calculate
outer boundary rather than real surface space, there may be factors reducing
the real space available,
>    such as pillars, things fixed to the floor, I even once found there was
a round bar in the middle of a very large space - not movable …..;
>    drinks etc to be served outside the room, computer station and
registration outside the room - if you have all that inside, I agree with
Gerardo's 3 sq meters.
>
> On the other hand, there may be reasons why there is more space than seems
the case. Like a large lobby area around, some tables and chairs on a
terrace outside
> when the weather is nice, and so on.  I always like to have a look around
on site to see whether there are these kind of possibilities.
>
> I have also found the shape of the room has some impact. A round or square
room somehow seems to accommodate more people than a room which is longish.
> Finally the power of the question I feel also has an influence on how many
fit into a room. I once had 200 in a cellar 40 by 7 meters, dark and my head
almost touched the ceiling,
> so by all calculations a space very unfit. It did not matter. They used it
because they were i trouble and could not afford to rent a location, and it
sort of enhanced the sense
> something had to be done.
>
> Hope this is useful,
>
> Greetings from a beginning snowstorm,
>
>
>
>
> Gerard Muller
> Open Space Institute Denmark
>
>
> On Mar 19, 2013, at 1:44 PM, Michael M Pannwitz <mmpannw...@gmail.com>
wrote:
>
>> I see it about the same way as you, Gerardo, the number of people in an
open space is in relation to the main space where everyone is gathering for
the start, the bulletin board and the market.
>> My rule of thumb is to ask how many folks the room will hold theater
style seating (in rows) and divide that by 3 (for larger rooms you can also
get the number of chairs allowed by the firedepartment and divide by
three)... that usually allows both for the circle and enough space for the
bulletin board.
>> Of course, the shape is important.
>> Karis large room is fairly perfect, in my experience, with dimensions
similar to that of an A4 sheet (3 x 2), leaving enough space at either end
of the room for the bulletin board... or for one or two breakout spaces for
the time after the opening with some breaking up of the initial circle.
>> You can probably get everyone to sit in one real circle with about 35
people, or have a very perfect circle with about 22 people and then add
parts of circles on the two edges facing the narrow side of the room to
accomodate about 40 people.
>> Of course, the neat approach is to have a good guess at how many people
are expected and search for a venue THEN.
>> Another observation I have made is that the space is never too large...
and spacious is grand for open space... with the additional option to have
all of the action (breakout spaces etc.) all in one space for everyone to
see the whole action all the time (the never-ending buffet is better outside
in the hallway close to the news wall).
>>
>> Greetings from Berlin where I told a potential client a couple of weeks
ago that the space he has for his event with 400 folks is big enough for a
135 people open space... no response!
>> mmp
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> .03.2013 12:30, scuola superiore facilitazione wrote:
>>> Hi Kàri.
>>> The problem is the opening  - you need to put all participants into one
>>> room.
>>> So I normally calculate the /carrying capacity /on the main room.
>>> My rule of the thumb is 3sqm per participants.
>>> Of course you can reduce the parameter a bit according to the shape of
>>> the room
>>> ge
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Mar 18, 2013 at 11:18 PM, Kári Gunnarsson
>>> <kari.gunnars...@simnet.is <mailto:kari.gunnars...@simnet.is>> wrote:
>>>
>>>     Dear Oslist
>>>
>>>     A client is asking about how many people he can have in Open Space
for
>>>     a given venue.
>>>
>>>     The space is divided in 3 rooms, on of them is upstairs. There
>>>     dimensions and spaces are as follows:
>>>
>>>     Big room: 7,8m x 12,8m (100 m2)
>>>     Small side room: 5,0m x 8,8m (44 m2)
>>>     Long room upstairs: 3,4m x 12,8m (43 m2)
>>>
>>>     Total work area: 187 m2
>>>
>>>     Here are my gestimations:
>>>     If I where only to use the large room, then I would only invite
>>>     40-50 people
>>>     If I where to exclude the room upstairs then I could invite 60-70
people
>>>     But if I would include the room upstairs, then I could perhaps
invite
>>>     up to 90 people
>>>
>>>     What are your thoughts on venue selection?
>>>
>>>     --
>>>     Kári Gunnarsson
>>>     kari.gunnars...@simnet.is <mailto:kari.gunnars...@simnet.is>
>>>     gsm: +354 8645189 <tel:%2B354%208645189>
>>>     _______________________________________________
>>>     OSList mailing list
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>>>     --
>>>
>>>
<http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org>
>>>
>>>     *Gerardo de Luzenberger
>>>     ***IAF: Certified Professional Facilitator*Mob: +39 3293281343*
>>>
<http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org>ge@scu
olafacilitazione.it
>>>
<https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/blocked::mailto:info@scuolafacilitazione.i
t>
>>>
>>>
>>>     **
>>>
>>>     *
>>>     **SSF - Scuola di Facilitazione*
>>>
>>>     *Via AlessandroVolta 6*
>>>     *20121 Milano*
>>>     Tel: +39 02 89751746
>>>     *Fax: +39 02 87151318 *
>>>     i...@scuolafacilitazione.it
>>>     www.scuoladifacilitazione.it <http://www.scuoladifacilitazione.it>
>>>     www.loci.it
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>
>> --
>> Michael M Pannwitz
>> Draisweg 1, 12209 Berlin, Germany
>> ++49 - 30-772 8000
>>
>>
>>
>> Check out the Open Space World Map presently showing 405 resident Open
Space Workers in 72 countries working in a total of 143 countries worldwide:
www.openspaceworldmap.org
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>
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-- 
Michael M Pannwitz
Draisweg 1, 12209 Berlin, Germany
++49 - 30-772 8000



Check out the Open Space World Map presently showing 405 resident Open 
Space Workers in 72 countries working in a total of 143 countries 
worldwide: www.openspaceworldmap.org
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