• Welcome to The Building Code Forum

    Your premier resource for building code knowledge.

    This forum remains free to the public thanks to the generous support of our Sawhorse Members and Corporate Sponsors. Their contributions help keep this community thriving and accessible.

    Want enhanced access to expert discussions and exclusive features? Learn more about the benefits here.

    Ready to upgrade? Log in and upgrade now.

Question re: adjacent Assembly spaces

palikona

REGISTERED
Joined
Jan 8, 2022
Messages
93
Location
Colorado
I have a potential client who is doing a TI in two adjacent existing spaces. Both would be A-2 spaces, each with a bar with open floor space for dancing and a stage. I need to find the occupant load and analyze the egress requirements: can I combine the two separate spaces into one if there is a physical connection between the two (there’s a 6’ wide existing opening between the two) or do I need to treat them as two distinct A2 spaces?

The reason I ask is if they are treated separately, they both will need 2 exits each based on the load in each space, but if they can be treated as one whole space, they would need 3 total exits.

Thanks for the help.
 
It seems each space is less than 500 so each space requires 2 MOE. Since both are in same building, the building needs 3 MOE. Doesn't change regardless of opening between the two rooms unless it is permanently open one to the other and than a total of 3, not 2 from each part. Travel distance, common path of travel, etc. could affect it.

Whichever is main entrance no matter what the config (divided or joined) has to be min. 50% of OL.

Make sense? Maybe I'm missing something.
 
It seems each space is less than 500 so each space requires 2 MOE. Since both are in same building, the building needs 3 MOE. Doesn't change regardless of opening between the two rooms unless it is permanently open one to the other and than a total of 3, not 2 from each part. Travel distance, common path of travel, etc. could affect it.

Whichever is main entrance no matter what the config (divided or joined) has to be min. 50% of OL.

Make sense? Maybe I'm missing something.
1 space is 500 people and 1 is 287. Ah, the building needs 3 MOE, not 4? I was thinking each A2 space needed 2 MOE and therefore 4 for the building.

The opening is permanently open but it’s only 6’ wide (between the two A2 spaces).

When you say main entry: you mean to the two A2 spaces? Not the building itself, right?
 
I meant main entry to the building, but I can see there could be other options. I assume a building with two assembly spaces has one main building entrance - but my experience. If each part has its own main entrance - from public way - fine - but when used for a single event - one should be sized for half that occupant load. There is a option or exception to the main entrance rule but I dont think of using it for under 1000 occupants.

Your project may be fine but possibly far different than what I'm used to.
 
I have seen major municipalities approve a max. 4’ wide opening between two 749 sf "B" occupancies rather than calling them a combined 1498 sf "A" occupancy.
The 4‘ wide opening is the ‘exit through an intervening room’. Each room also has a 2nd, distinct exit that does not require travel through an intervening room.
 
I have seen major municipalities approve a max. 4’ wide opening between two 749 sf "B" occupancies rather than calling them a combined 1498 sf "A" occupancy.
The 4‘ wide opening is the ‘exit through an intervening room’. Each room also has a 2nd, distinct exit that does not require travel through an intervening room.
Thanks!
 
I have a potential client who is doing a TI in two adjacent existing spaces. Both would be A-2 spaces, each with a bar with open floor space for dancing and a stage. I need to find the occupant load and analyze the egress requirements: can I combine the two separate spaces into one if there is a physical connection between the two (there’s a 6’ wide existing opening between the two) or do I need to treat them as two distinct A2 spaces?

The reason I ask is if they are treated separately, they both will need 2 exits each based on the load in each space, but if they can be treated as one whole space, they would need 3 total exits.

Thanks for the help.
I think your Code Official will want to see a Life safety Drawing with the travel distances and rated assemblies identified, Fire Alarm (sprinklier?) and other info Tables Legal Occupancy etc, to provide a real review
 
Back
Top