Facilities, Infrastructure and Assessments
The community and technical college capital budget process sets aside Emergency Capital Funds each biennium to respond to emergencies and unforeseen conditions.
The Capital Budget office helps Washington state community and technical colleges monitor the conditions of buildings, equipment and property.
The facility assessment report includes summaries, analysis, and synthesis of what you found during the walk-through, based on interviews, background research, and resource accounting.
Contacts
John Lyons
Principal Architect
jlyons@sbctc.edu
360-704-4395
Facilities and Equipment Management
- FAE inventory space coding matrix
- Space coding matrix guide
- FAE facility coding manual
- Current CIP code list with descriptions
- Facilities dashboard
- DirectLine quick reference guides
- DirectLine new building/room template
- DirectLine Login
Facility Condition Surveys (FCS)
SBCTC surveys the condition of capital assets every two years for college use in reviewing building and site conditions for their campus or district.
This survey helps SBCTC establish the relative severity of each capital repair deficiency to allow system-wide prioritization of college repair requests and to estimate the cost of the projects to be requested for its next biennial capital budget.
The scope of the condition survey update may include major building systems, utility
distribution systems, and some site elements. It does not include dormitories, parking
lots, asbestos hazard
identification, ADA compliance, new construction, construction currently under warranty,
or facilities recently purchased.
Infrastructure Asset Survey
In 2019, SBCTC surveyed the location and condition of capital infrastructure assets throughout the college system. The survey information is used to help identify the greatest need for component replacement to avoid program disruptions.
The infrastructure survey compliments the facility condition survey process with a focus on components that support core facility functions and are typically buried underground. All assets that are identified in the survey have been ranked to establish a list of prioritized minor works projects. These projects are included in capital budget requests as the identified assets reach the expected end of their useful life.