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Does a factory count? If so... https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_Everett_Factory
The NASA Vehicle Assembly Building is also a contender.
I'm not sure how many dividing walls there are inside Everett, but the VAB is basically one massive empty skyscraper.
I don't know if it's true, but I've heard the ceiling is so high it has its own weather.
checks
That being said, I don't know if it is internally divided.
There's a really large cave in Southeast Asia somewhere.
kagis
The Sơn Đoòng cave in Vietnam:
So that'd be nearly triple the volume of the Everett Factory. Though the cave has two holes in its roof, and I don't know exactly how you define "room" here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOH4gbW18Ts
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVpk7LQML8g
They had to change their venting and airflow system for that building after it formed a cloud and rained inside. When your room can have weather systems, I feel you've entered a whole new category of 'room' by definition.
Thats crazy! Fascinating! Could one engineer a climate system such that it always rained? Can lightning and thunder occur as well?
It is sorta internally divided, but there are places where you can see from one end to the other (about a mile).
Factories will win this hands down, especially when you're building large/complex items. It looks like the distinction might be "single building" vs "complex or buildings", but VW's Wolfsburg plant is 70 million square feet. The largest plant I've been to isn't on that list, but it's still over a half mile wide - all under a single roof.
https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/g2904/7-of-the-worlds-largest-manufacturing-plants/
Well that sure is a bit larger than a church.
It's actually kind of amazing to see a building with multiple assembly lines of wide body airplanes. The tour is well worth the drive to Everett if you are ever in Seattle.
I got lucky at a conference. They got us a VIP tour of the Boeing Everett factory, which walked on the assembly floor. It was a phenomenal experience. The sheer scale of the operation, the size of the planes, and the detail work was astounding.
I went looking but couldn't find a reference. US Air Force Plant 4 in Fort Worth (where the F-35 is assembled) was at one point the longest length building without internal support columns. I've been told that there is a twin building somewhere else, but the one in Texas is 25 feet longer. I just can't find a source with the number!