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Centralized restroom facilities

Yikes

SAWHORSE
Joined
Nov 2, 2009
Messages
3,952
Location
Southern California
I'm working on a convention center campus (in California) which includes both historic and new buildings, none more than 2 stories high. The new building's restrooms are accessible and have enough fixtures to satisfy the requirements of Table 4-1. Question: is there any requirement that says each building MUST have its own restroom? Or can we simply direct people to a central restroom location (in the new building) with unrestricted access from all other buildings?

In other words, can the concept of centralized restrooms (like I used to see at my elementary school) work at thsi convention center?

I see that CPC 412.2 "Access to Fixtures" limits the number of stories you must travel, but I see no limitation of horizontal distance.

CPC 412.5 limits horizontal travel distance to a common restroom shared by independent mercantile businesses - - but I see no such restriction for my convention center, which is a single business entity.
 
2902.6 Public facilities.

Customers, patrons and visitors shall be provided with public toilet facilities in structures and tenant spaces intended for public utilization. Public toilet facilities shall be located not more than one story above or below the space required to be provided with public toilet facilities and the path of travel to such facilities shall not exceed a distance of 500 feet (152 m).
 
steveray said:
2902.6 Public facilities. Customers, patrons and visitors shall be provided with public toilet facilities in structures and tenant spaces intended for public utilization. Public toilet facilities shall be located not more than one story above or below the space required to be provided with public toilet facilities and the path of travel to such facilities shall not exceed a distance of 500 feet (152 m).
CA does not use chapter 29
 
mark handler said:
CA does not use chapter 29
Ohh yeah!......Well...I don't use California!....So there! :) Thanks Mark.....So the UPC/CPC didn't have the 500? Or the weather is so nice there that people don't mind a nice stroll to the restroom so they took it out in CA only?
 
The CA plumbing code does not state a max distance of travel, or if it must be in the same building, for an A occupancy
 
steveray said:
Ohh yeah!......Well...I don't use California!....So there! :) Thanks Mark.....So the UPC/CPC didn't have the 500? Or the weather is so nice there that people don't mind a nice stroll to the restroom so they took it out in CA only?
500 lf is for Facilities in Mercantile and Business Occupancies, Serving Customers, only.
 
Have a nice trip?

Where an I going?

By the way if you Just design to the code does not make a good design....

Are the centralized restrooms sized for all the users? all the buildings?
 
Yes, the centralized restrooms are sized for all users, for the maximum number of occupants that are allowed on the campus overall.

The building in question is historic and although there were nonaccessible bathrooms in the original structure (on a non-accessible historic mezzanine level) there's not enough space to provide accessible facilities without destroying character-defining features of the building. For the concept of equivalent facilitation, the client is considering closing the non-accessible restrooms and re-routing everyone the adjacent new accessible building. That way everyone has to travel the same distance to the restrooms, and no one is favored with a shortcut to non-accessible restrooms.
 
So in the interest of fairness, the able bodied will suffer because the disabled suffer.

I hope that this concept doesn't grow legs.
 
It is a campus which is a "B" occupancy under the building code and a campus has customers who pay to attend so I would think UPC 412.5.2 would be applicable. A central facility within 500 feet maximum distance. JMHO
 
ICE, yes, that it the most conservative approach, often taken by deep-pockets institutions. I'll leave it up to the client's attorneys to decide how agressively they want to push this issue.

FYI, the accessible restrooms are only about 100' away from the entrance to historic building, so in actually, it's no long walk (or roll), and we're in a mild climate. In this particular instance, equal-opportunity suffering really isn't that bad.

I can probaly use the hitoric building code to keep the current bathrooms in use, but I just wanted to know if the project was still viable even if I don't use the historic code.
 
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