Use Google Calendar structured resources

Google recommends you define your Calendar resources using a structured format. Structured resources include information about the resource location, capacity, or equipment. Calendar uses this data to give more room and resource details, helping your users choose the best resource for their needs. Define structured resources to take advantage of new Calendar features and enhanced capabilities.

Unstructured (legacy) resources only use these fields:

  • Resource ID
  • Name
  • Description

If you only have these fields set for a resource, it’s a legacy resource. Resources created before October 17, 2017 are probably legacy resources.

Benefits of structured resources 

Changing your data to a structured format requires some extra work, but that investment is worth the effort. When you structure your resources, users can: 

Switch to structured resources

Convert your resources to a structured format, so you can benefit from future enhancements to Google Calendar. When you use structured resources, your users have the best possible experience with booking rooms and other calendar features.

Understand the changes, test, and communicate

Using structured resource information changes the way your users interact with Calendar. We recommend you prepare for these changes in the following ways:

  • Analyze the way your current resources are managed, and understand how migrating to structured format changes the user experience.
  • Use structured resources in a test environment first to see how the changes appear. Keep a backup of your current resource information.
  • Update internal applications and third-party software. For example, applications that rely on custom naming conventions. 
  • Tell your users about the new behavior and changes, and manage the roll out of these changes.

Changes to the user experience

Users will see the following changes when you adopt the new structured format in your company. 

Changed search results

Before

Resources display as one long resource name

After

Resources display with information organized

Changed display for rooms and non-rooms

For rooms (Category CONFERENCE_ROOM)  
  1. Resource name
  2. Building
  3. Floor & section
  4. Capacity
  5. A/V features

 

For non-rooms (Category OTHER)
  1. Resource name
  2. Building
  3. Floor & section
  4. Capacity
  5. Resource type
  6. A/V features (if present)

Changed resource display  

When you point to a resource, extra details are displayed:

 

For rooms (Category CONFERENCE_ROOM)


For non-rooms (Category OTHER)

Changed resource order

Before October 17, 2017

Previously, the grouping in the rooms list was based on resource names. For example, the rooms were listed according to the prefix rather than something more helpful in deciding which resource to use. If you had many rooms with a certain prefix (for example: CH-ZRHA) then all those rooms were grouped together under this prefix.

Example resource names:

CH-ZRHA-FavoriteRoom’1 [Phone, VC]

CH-ZRHA-SecondFavoriteRoom’1 [Phone, VC]

US-SFO-RoominSFO’2 [Phone, VC]

Grouping by prefix:

Where buildings are ZRH-OfficeA and SFO-OfficeB

After October 17, 2017

Grouping is based on the buildings you create. Non-rooms and rooms will be grouped in their building nodes.

Example of new autogenerated names:

ZRH-OfficeA-1-FavoriteRoom (4) [Phone, VC]

ZRH-OfficeA-1-SecondFavoriteRoom (2) [Phone, VC]

SFO-OfficeB-RoominSFO (2) [Phone, VC]

Where buildings are ZRH-OfficeA and SFO-OfficeB

Grouping by building name:

Floor naming and display order:

Floors in buildings display in numerical order. For example:

  • Floor “1” comes before “2”
  • Floor “12th” comes before “1st”; as “2”<”s”

To display floors in the correct order, use numbered floors such as: “01”, “02, …, “12”

Changed resource names and display 

For legacy resources Google recommended a specific name format for resources. A resource hierarchy is automatically created whenever more than 10 resources with a '-' are added. If there are more than 100 resources in a header group, then the group is split into subheaders.

With structured resource information, the Google naming convention becomes standard and is used to create autogenerated names from the individual resource fields. Autogenerated names are created when any resource field other than resource name, resource type, or description is updated.

  • [building]-[floor] [room name] ([room capacity]) [Audio and video features]
  • [(resource type)]-[building]-[floor]-[room name] ([room capacity]) [Audio and video features]

Autogenerated names: 

  • Make the format of resource names consistent across your organization. 
  • Automatic update of room details (for example, when capacity increases, features are added or changed).
  • Make it easy to understand the properties of any room or resource by looking at the name.

The new autogenerated name displays in these locations:

Participants list

In the Participants list for Calendar events, the new autogenerated resource name format replaces the old resource name.

Where field on web and mobile

In the Where field of Calendar events, the new autogenerated resource name format replaces the old resource name.

Notifications on mobile devices

In notifications on mobile or web, the new autogenerated name format replaces the old resource name.

Convert your resources, features, and buildings  

There are 3 ways to update your resources:

Change resources using a CSV

If you have an administrator role with privileges for managing buildings and resources assigned to your account, update the resources in your organization using these steps.    

Step 1: Download to a CSV from the admin console

Begin by downloading resource information into a CSV file.

  1. Sign in to your Google Admin console.

    Sign in using your administrator account (does not end in @gmail.com).

  2. In the Admin console, go to Menu and then Directoryand thenBuildings and resources.
  3. Open Resource management.
  4. Click Download  and thenDownload.
  5. Save the CSV file.

Step 2: Import CSV data into a spreadsheet  

After you download your CSV file, import it to a spreadsheet. 

  1. Open a blank Google Sheet and go to File > Import
  2. Navigate to the downloaded CSV file, and click Select
  3. In the Import window, make your selections and click Import data.

Step 3: Edit resources in a spreadsheet 

Review the information in the spreadsheet and note any blank on non-conforming fields, and update them as the table suggests in Formats to use.

Note: Don’t modify the resource ID. If you do, a brand new resource will be created instead of updating the existing one. 

Edit the spreadsheet 

  1. Use the spreadsheet you create in the previous steps above.
  2. Edit the fields as needed.  

    Important: To identify features in the spreadsheet, the feature name needs to be prepended with a #. For example,  #Whiteboard

  3. When editing is complete, save the spreadsheet as a CSV file.

Example spreadsheets 

Resource ID*

Resource Name*

Resource Category*

Resource Type

Floor Name*

Capacity*

Building ID*

123 Auditorium CONFERENCE_ROOM   1 40 81
234 James's Hideout OTHER Lounge 4 5 82

* Required

User Visible Description

Description

#Whiteboard

#Phone

  Managed by [email protected] TRUE TRUE
Ask James's assistant to reserve Managed by [email protected] FALSE FALSE

Step 4: Upload a CSV after editing   

After editing your spreadsheet, you’re ready to upload your changes into Calendar. 

  1. Sign in to your Google Admin console.

    Sign in using your administrator account (does not end in @gmail.com).

  2. In the Admin console, go to Menu and then Directoryand thenBuildings and resources.
  3. Open Resource management.
  4. Point to Add  and click Upload  .
  5. Click Attach CSV and follow the prompts to attach the CSV file.
  6. Click Upload.

Formats to use

When you edit your spreadsheet, use these formats.   

Format for all resources  

Use this format for the resources you create in Calendar. 

Property name Description Example
Resource Id*

The unique room identifier Google generates for you when you create a resource.

(don't edit or remove for existing resources)

28AF38E
Resource Name*

Short room name.

(suggested maximum character limit 45)

Beehive room
Building Id*     This Building ID must match exactly the Building ID defined for the building where the resource is located. SF-MAIN
Resource Category*

Conference room: Resources that are used for meetings or conferences that can be as small as a phone room. 

Other: Resources that aren’t used for meetings. For example, a Jamboard, bicycle, or company car.

Category unknown: Resources that don’t conform to the structure format

(for new resources, use Conference room and Other)

CONFERENCE_ROOM 
Resource Type Existing field. When the Resource category is set to Other, this field is added as a prefix to the autogenerated name and helps distinguish non-rooms from rooms. It also helps categorize the resource type. For example: Bike, Vehicle, Mother’s room, or Microscope.  Bike
Floor Name*

The floor name must match one of the floors defined in the building.

(suggested maximum character limit 15)

10
Capacity*     Recommended number of people for the room. Must be a positive integer. 4
Floor Section

Indicates where on the floor a room is located.

(suggested maximum character limit 15)

A
User Visible Description Free-form description of the room that is visible to users in the room details. Note: This description is only displayed while booking the resource. After selecting the resource or saving an event, this description is no longer displayed. Phone extension #4119
Description Optional description of your room or resource that is visible on the Admin console for your reference.

Every member of [email protected] has booking rights to the room

East side building

#Feature

Features are attributes or equipment of a room or resource, such as:

  • Audio features: #Phone
  • Video features: #VC, #Cisco conferencing unit.
  • Other features: #Whiteboard, #Wheelchair accessible, #External guests.
TRUE
Autogenerated name Read-only. This is generated when the resource category is set either to Conference_room or Other. SF-MAIN-Beehive Room (4) [VC]

* Required

Format for buildings 

Use this format for the buildings you create in Calendar. 

Property name Description Example
Building Id* This Building ID must match exactly the Building ID defined for the building. SF-MAIN
Building Name Display name for the building San Francisco HQ
Address*   Address information for buildings. See Format for building addresses 678 Lafayette Ave
Suite 2B

Graha Bumi Surabaya Lt. V
Jl. Basuki Rahmat no.106 - 128

雨竜郡秩父別町秩父別4105
 
Floors* Should be separated by commas and list in ascending order from lower to upper. Lobby, M, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5A, 6
Description Optional description of your building that is visible on the Admin console for your reference. East side building
Coordinates 

Latitude and longitude of a building 

40.730610,
-73.935242

* Required

Manage legacy resources

If you decide not to convert all of your resources to structured resources, make sure you follow a resource naming convention for those legacy resources to make them easier to identify and use.

Conference room resources

One suggested format for a conference room is:

[city abbrev]-[building]-[floor] [room name] ([room capacity]) [Audio and video features]

Example:

NYC-14-12-Boardroom (15) VC

This conference room is in New York city in building 14, on floor 12. The room's name is Boardroom. It holds 15 people and has video conferencing equipment.

Other resources

To distinguish all other types of resources from conference rooms, we suggest the following format:

[(resource type)]-[city abbrev]-[building]-[floor or location]-[Audio and video features]
 

In this format, all non-room resources start with ' ( ' so they won't be mixed in with the conference rooms. Ideally, all non-room resources appear at the bottom of the resource list.

Examples of non-room resources Description
(Bike)-London-43-Lobby-Bike-1 This bicycle is in London at building 43's lobby. This is 'Bike 1' (rather than 'Bike 2' or 'Bike 3').
(Vehicle)-LA-Prius-Main-North-4 This vehicle is in Los Angeles. It's a Prius parked at the Main building in the North parking lot in parking space 4.

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