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Not the stair framing inside the shaft.Everything in IA is rated.....
They shouldn't be passing through the shaft. Is this in design or built?I have a type IA high rise where some beams cross through the protected stairways.
Since there are no combustibles in the stairways, do the beams still need to be fire rated?
This is design.They shouldn't be passing through the shaft. Is this in design or built?
Right!Everything in IA is rated.....
Right!
Column and beams rating is achieved many ways.
Encasement is one way to do it, so in principle the part of a beam inside a protected stairwell is protected itself.
Throwing a layer of intumescent paint on a beam at the factory is no big deal, but doing it on site raises some issues. The rest of the beams , outside the stairwell I mean, are either encased in plaster boards or treated with intumescent paint on site.
Throwing a layer of intumescent paint on a beam at the factory is no big deal, but doing it on site raises some issues. The rest of the beams , outside the stairwell I mean, are either encased in plaster boards or treated with intumescent paint on site.
Not the toilet partitions either, but this is a beam...Not the stair framing inside the shaft.
The cost of intumescent paint is that it takes 10 layers and you have to wait between coats. The paint costs the same as wall paint, its the multiple layers that adds all the expense.Throwing a layer of intumescent paint on a beam at the factory is no big deal, but doing it on site raises some issues.