sbb-j
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I'm involved with a potential building of 100,000+ sf. We are considering structural systems and what kind of fire resistance will be required for the project. It will be an F-1 occupancy.
for cost reasons one option is a PEMB system for the building. Typically these are considered Type II-B which would only allow up to ~73K sf with the maximum frontage increase. If we want to make it a Type II-A building we would need add 1 hour of fire resistance to the structural frame, bearing walls, roof, etc. I believe that spray-on fire protection or intumescent paint would give us the rating on the building steel, but the roof assembly seems to be a challenge. The only UL assemblies I can find for a 1 hour roof/ceiling involve a full layer or gyp. bd. For a building of this size That would be tremendously expensive. It also seems like a lot of similar buildings I see of this type and size do not have ceiling like this. My question regarding this situation is:
for cost reasons one option is a PEMB system for the building. Typically these are considered Type II-B which would only allow up to ~73K sf with the maximum frontage increase. If we want to make it a Type II-A building we would need add 1 hour of fire resistance to the structural frame, bearing walls, roof, etc. I believe that spray-on fire protection or intumescent paint would give us the rating on the building steel, but the roof assembly seems to be a challenge. The only UL assemblies I can find for a 1 hour roof/ceiling involve a full layer or gyp. bd. For a building of this size That would be tremendously expensive. It also seems like a lot of similar buildings I see of this type and size do not have ceiling like this. My question regarding this situation is:
- Is there another way to provide a 1-hour roof assembly that doesn't involve a continuous layer of gyp. bd?
- Is there an exception in the IBC (2021) that allows the roof to not be rated?