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Indeed. They are required over exits. Real exits.Here's list of prohibited locations from 1011.1 Where Required:
Just hijacked it to high holy hell, didn't we? Sorry TJ. At least it's civil and on-topic.TJacobs said:Boy, this is fun...![]()
Just hijacked it to high holy hell, didn't we? Sorry TJ. At least it's civil and on-topic.texasbo said:TJacobs said:Boy, this is fun...![]()
This is what I was hoping for actually, because it allows me to see where others are getting their logic.TJacobs said:Just hijacked it to high holy hell, didn't we? Sorry TJ. At least it's civil and on-topic.texasbo said:TJacobs said:Boy, this is fun...![]()
Indeed. They are required over exits. Real exits.texasbo said:Brudgers wrote:Here's list of prohibited locations from 1011.1 Where Required:
It's your thread, TJ, and I think it's pretty loose around here right now.TJacobs said:Wow...I'd like to post right now but I would be taken out of context.
Of course fake fire extinguishers are not analogous. The exit sign is real. The analogous case would be prohibiting working fire extinguishers from locations that do not require them.texasbo said:Nah... my sign, in this case, is a nice blank wall above the door leading into the warehouse. Or maybe a mural of the Las Vegas Hilton painted above it. What's your feeling about fake fire extiguishers? I mean, you've got the required amount. The extras don't have to actually work do they?
Spaces w/ 1 exit need to be evaluated for both OL and CPofT per 1015.1 or as directed to 1015.1 by 1019.2 No.3. What am I missing?TJacobs said:No. The B use OL is 29, and the S-1 use OL is 8, so the total OL is 37. Since each use can have 1 exit when evaluated separately, and the whole space is under the 2-exit OL, I did not evaluate CP of T since 2 exits are required. Fully-sprinklered building per 903.3.1.1, so permitted travel distance is 250' in S-1 and 300' in B.
I disagree. A fake fire extinguisher puts out a real fire about as well as a fake exit sign gets you to a real exit.Of course fake fire extinguishers are not analogous. The exit sign is real. The analogous case would be prohibiting working fire extinguishers from locations that do not require them.
In this case, less is moreThe ontological - the absence of a sign is a sign.
See above. It's false because it doesn't point to an exit.Or the metaphysical - an exit sign can be indexly false even though it points to the exit to which it purports to point
Look at 1014.2, Item 2: "Egress shall not pass...through storage rooms...or spaces used for similar purposes.". There's an exception for M occupancies, if certain criteria is met.brudgers said:OK so here's the thought experiment.Since the occupancies are not required to be separated, then the door is not required.
So take it out and just provide a cased opening.
Paint lines on either side of a path connecting the cased opening to rear door of the warehouse.
On the plan, designate the continuous and uninterupted path from the front door, through the opening, to the rear door as "Exit access 1."
Now, can you put an exit sign over both sides of the cased opening?
Spaces w/ 1 exit need to be evaluated for both OL and CPofT per 1015.1 or as directed to 1015.1 by 1019.2 No.3. What am I missing?Plans Approver said:Just got back from an all day seminar on wall bracing. It will take some time to catch up, but ...TJacobs said:No. The B use OL is 29, and the S-1 use OL is 8, so the total OL is 37. Since each use can have 1 exit when evaluated separately, and the whole space is under the 2-exit OL, I did not evaluate CP of T since 2 exits are NOT*required. Fully-sprinklered building per 903.3.1.1, so permitted travel distance is 250' in S-1 and 300' in B.
Look at 1014.2, Item 2: "Egress shall not pass...through storage rooms...or spaces used for similar purposes.". There's an exception for M occupancies, if certain criteria is met.texasbo said:brudgers said:OK so here's the thought experiment.Since the occupancies are not required to be separated, then the door is not required.
So take it out and just provide a cased opening.
Paint lines on either side of a path connecting the cased opening to rear door of the warehouse.
On the plan, designate the continuous and uninterupted path from the front door, through the opening, to the rear door as "Exit access 1."
Now, can you put an exit sign over both sides of the cased opening?
I must be dense or I'm kicking the crap out of a dead horse. I don't understand how you can not take into account the common path of travel. Common path of travel is not exclusive to buildings with 2 or more exits. In the case you presented, the termination of the common path of travel is the exit discharge for each space. At that point, they out of the building and should more than 2 directions of travel if it is the public way.TJacobs said:No. The B use OL is 29, and the S-1 use OL is 8, so the total OL is 37. Since each use can have 1 exit when evaluated separately, and the whole space is under the 2-exit OL, I did not evaluate CP of T since 2 exits NOT*are required. Fully-sprinklered building per 903.3.1.1, so permitted travel distance is 250' in S-1 and 300' in B.
Fixed it for you.And of course a warehouse is a warehouse, not a storage room or a space used for a similar purpose per 1014.2, 2006 IBC.