CEN/TC 348/WG 4 - Taxonomy of Facility Management
Taxonomy of Facility Management
General Information
Frequently Asked Questions
CEN/TC 348/WG 4 is a Working Group within the European Committee for Standardization (CEN). It is named "Taxonomy of Facility Management". This committee has published 2 standards.
CEN/TC 348/WG 4 develops CEN standards in the area of Information technology. Currently, there are 2 published standards from this working group.
The European Committee for Standardization (CEN) is a public standards organization that brings together the national standardization bodies of 34 European countries. CEN provides a platform for developing European Standards (ENs) and other technical documents in relation to various products, materials, services, and processes, supporting the European Single Market.
A Working Group in CEN is a specialized group responsible for developing standards or technical work within a defined scope. These bodies bring together international experts to create consensus-based standards that support global trade, safety, and interoperability.
FM covers and integrates a very broad scope of processes, products / services, activities and facilities. The approach of this standard is to consider the added value provided to the primary activities by adopting a product perspective as recognised by the primary processes or core business in the organisation. This standard therefore introduces the concept of standardised (classified) facility products.
The scope of this standard is to provide taxonomy for FM which includes:
- relevant interrelationship of elements and their structures in FM;
- definitions of terms and contents to standardise facility products which provide a basis for cross border trade, data management, cost allocation and benchmarking;
- a high level classification and hierarchical coding structure for the standardised facility products;
- expanding the basic FM model given in EN 15221-1 by adding a time scale in the form of the quality cycle called PDCA (Plan, Do, Check, Act);
- a linkage to existing cost and facilities structures;
- alignment with the primary activities requirements.
Additional benefits from this standard are:
- Introducing a client rather than a specifically asset oriented view;
- harmonisation of different existing national structures (e.g. building cost codes) on an upper level relevant for the organisation and its primary activities.
- Draft100 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
FM covers and integrates a very broad scope of processes, products / services, activities and facilities. The approach of this standard is to consider the added value provided to the primary activities by adopting a product perspective as recognised by the primary processes or core business in the organisation. This standard therefore introduces the concept of standardised (classified) facility products.
The scope of this standard is to provide taxonomy for FM which includes:
- relevant interrelationship of elements and their structures in FM;
- definitions of terms and contents to standardise facility products which provide a basis for cross border trade, data management, cost allocation and benchmarking;
- a high level classification and hierarchical coding structure for the standardised facility products;
- expanding the basic FM model given in EN 15221-1 by adding a time scale in the form of the quality cycle called PDCA (Plan, Do, Check, Act);
- a linkage to existing cost and facilities structures;
- alignment with the primary activities requirements.
Additional benefits from this standard are:
- Introducing a client rather than a specifically asset oriented view;
- harmonisation of different existing national structures (e.g. building cost codes) on an upper level relevant for the organisation and its primary activities.
- Standard82 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day





