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1hr rated Fire rated partition meeting mullion of aluminum storefront

doregan

Member
Joined
Feb 15, 2010
Messages
9
Does anybody know of a method of achieving a 1hr stud partition meeting the back side of a mullion in an aluminium storefront. This is for a fit-out - effectively splitting an existing storefront into 2 - separate tenants either side. I have seen it done - just wondering if it is anything approaching satisfying the codes out there.

Down here we are using 1999 Standard Building Code - but I am interested in knowing if it satisfies any jurisdictions requirements.
 
Since the storefront is not a fire-resistance-rated assembly, there is no requirement for a fire-resistant joint between the 1-hour wall and the storefront. There are products out there made specifically for these wall-to-storefront connections.
 
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doregan,

Welcome to The Building Codes Forum! :cool:





What are the Occupancy Groups of the tenant spaces that are

being separated?....Also, in the 1997 Standard Building Code,

see Section 704 - FIRE RESISTANT SEPARATIONS.



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If the storefront is the outside wall I do not think abutting the tenant wall to the back of the storefront mullion is an issue. The outside walls are not usually rated especially since it maybe the storefront.
 
JBI and peach: I have no idea to what you're referring. It is not uncommon for tenant walls to terminate at storefront mullions.
 
Similar but not the same. The joints between floor systems and curtain walls are regulated by code (Section 714.4, 2009 IBC), but joints between a fire-resistance-rated wall assembly and a non-fire-resistance-rated wall is not regulated by code.
 
In the SBCCI, it requires a one-hour tenant seperation - The directions given in the SBCCI are very similar to the IBC discusion about termination of the rated assemblies. I belive it staill contains th elanguage terminate at an exterior wall or equally rated assembly. The storefront glass is glazing in an opening and not a wall. However, most juridictions treat the termination to a storefront window as "an exterior wall".

It works OK where I am at now because of hte hurricane resistance required by the current code - It (the glazing and frames) are a stouter construction that the thin steel panels of pre-engineered metal buildings where the tenant demising walls were allowed to terminate in a past area of employment.
 
Thanks all for your input. I am separating two Business occupancies.

This will happen and most likely be approved without issue - it is a common method used - just wondered if it was covered or indeed detailed anywhere as a rated assembly. I can see why sheetrock and curtain wall manufacturers would give it a wide berth though - considering the lack of specifics.

I think Builder Bobs comment on terminating at an opening in a wall rather than a wall is why I had reservations.
 
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