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Except you always were/ are allowed to travel a story away for a fixture:I had a client that had an existing 2 story elevator building with a stacked alcove in the 1st and 2nd floor for drinking fountains. The alcove was just wide enough for one single fountain.
For their renovation plans, they wanted to make the 1st floor fountain the "low fountain" and the second floor fountain the "high fountain". That way they wouldn't need to enlarge the alcoves for a combination hi-low fountain, which is much wider than a singe fountain.
I think the new IPC clarifies that they can't do this design, which forces people of different mobility limitations to go to different floors until they find the fountain height that works for them.
My client ultimately decided to expand the downstairs alcove for the hi-low fountain, and abandon the upstairs drinking fountain (as it was in excess of code minimum # of drinking fountains).
Agreed. It is perfectly OK to have a hi/low fountain on the first floor, and no drinking fountain on the second floor, which is what my clients decided to do.Except you always were/ are allowed to travel a story away for a fixture:
I would rather do that too, but as shown in post #9, I don't think the code gives us that option.Yikes...but in your existing building example, I would rather get complying fountains of different types on different floors than make them tear the building apart to get 2 in the existing alcove....
In an existing building it might....What code section requires the remodel to be "as new"?I would rather do that too, but as shown in post #9, I don't think the code gives us that option.