Industry Vertical

Pharmaceutical Cleanroom Coordination: GMP Drawing Review Essentials

Pharmaceutical cleanroom drawings carry FDA cGMP, ISPE baseline guides, and ISO 14644 classifications simultaneously. The review checklist is different from any other building type.

The Classification Cascade

Every cleanroom has a classification: ISO 5, 6, 7, or 8 (ISO 14644-1), sometimes expressed as GMP Grade A, B, C, or D under EU Annex 1. The classification drives HVAC air changes, HEPA filter coverage, pressure cascades, and construction materials. A drawing that doesn't show classification in a room schedule cannot be properly reviewed.

Typical air change rates:

  • ISO 5 / Grade A: Unidirectional flow with 0.36–0.54 m/s velocity—usually a laminar flow hood or isolator, not a full room
  • ISO 6 / Grade B: 60–100 ACH
  • ISO 7 / Grade C: 30–60 ACH
  • ISO 8 / Grade D: 10–20 ACH

Room-by-room verification: does the mechanical schedule show supply CFM that matches the volume times the required ACH? If not, the room can't achieve classification.

Pressure Cascade and Airlocks

Cleanroom pressure cascades are diagrammed on dedicated pressurization drawings, typically showing differential pressures between adjacent rooms:

  • Classified room to gown room: +15 Pa typical for non-hazardous
  • Gown to corridor: +10–15 Pa
  • Corridor to unclassified: +5–10 Pa
  • Containment (BSL-3, cytotoxic, or penicillin): NEGATIVE pressure—flipped cascade

Review must verify that airlock doors show interlock controls on the door schedule (doors cannot both open simultaneously), and that the HVAC drawing shows the differential-pressure sensors, variable-frequency drives, and control loop that maintain the cascade. Our laboratory drawing review covers parallel considerations for BSL containment.

Finishes, Coving, and Flush Details

Cleanroom finishes must be cleanable, non-shedding, and coved at every floor/wall intersection. Drawing details must show:

  • Integral cove base (heat-welded vinyl, epoxy, or seamless flooring), typically 4–6" radius
  • Flush-mounted lights and HEPA filters—no recessed returns that collect particulates
  • Wall panel systems (typically GRP, FRP, or stainless steel) with flush seams and sealed penetrations
  • Coved ceiling-to-wall for Grade A/B; square permissible for Grade C/D
  • No exposed conduit, junction boxes, or access panels in classified space—all MEP access from non-classified side

A common RFI topic in pharma construction: wall panel manufacturers have specific seam and corner details that differ from drywall assumptions—the wall type schedule must call out panel system specifically.

Utility Isolation and WFI Systems

Pharmaceutical utilities (Water for Injection, clean steam, compressed gases, process vents) have their own drawing set and coordination requirements:

  • WFI loop: orbital-welded stainless, slope for drainage (minimum 1/8" per foot), use points with sanitary connections
  • Clean steam: stainless, traps at low points, dead-leg limit (typically 6D or less)
  • Compressed gases (nitrogen, argon): stainless or process-grade copper, with separate schedule from HVAC refrigerant
  • Process drains: sloped, with breaks to prevent product-to-drain contamination

The plumbing drawings typically call out a separate symbol set for process utilities vs. domestic water.

Commissioning and Qualification Readiness

Pharma cleanrooms undergo IQ/OQ/PQ (Installation, Operational, Performance Qualification) before handover. The drawings must support testable acceptance criteria:

  • Room-by-room acceptance criteria table referencing the mechanical schedule
  • BMS point list showing all monitored parameters (temperature, humidity, DP, particle counts)
  • HEPA scan ports or integral-test provisions shown on mechanical drawings
  • Calibration and test equipment accommodations (power outlets, clean connection points)

How Helonic Helps

Helonic reads pharma drawing sets for ISO classification consistency across architectural room schedules, HVAC capacity calculations, and pressurization diagrams. The AI flags rooms where the air change count doesn't support classification, pressure cascades that don't close loop, and finishes incompatible with cleanroom requirements. For cGMP projects, the issue log ties to the validation master plan for audit traceability.

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