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If it closed - presumably because it was electrically unlatched - does that mean a person with a disability shouldn't open it?^ only if it is closed
Yes, the door shown would fall into the “other doors” portion of the following:Does that door have to meet the opening force requirements for accessibility?
A117.1-2021 404.2.8 Door and Gate Opening Force
Fire doors and doors or gates required to be equipped with panic hardware, break away features or other factors requiring higher opening force for safety reasons shall have the minimum opening force allowable in scoping provisions adopted by the appropriate administrative authority. For other doors and gates, the force for pushing or pulling open doors or gates shall be as follows:
1. Interior hinged door: 5.0 pounds maximum.
2. Sliding or folding door: 5.00 pounds maximum.
Exception: The force required to retract latch bolts or disengage other devices that hold the door or gate in a closed position shall not apply to panic hardware, delayed egress devices or fire-rated hardware.
So since it's a fire door wouldn't it be 30 pounds per 1010.1.3?Yes, the door shown would fall into the “other doors” portion of the following:
Yes, thank you, nice catch. I misread A117.1-2021 404.2.8 to mean: “Fire doors [required to be equipped with panic hardware] and doors or gates required to be equipped with panic hardware…” But what it’s saying is, “[All] fire doors[, and any] doors or gates required to be equipped with panic hardware…”.So since it's a fire door wouldn't it be 30 pounds per 1010.1.3?
Should it therefore lock?If there is a fire alarm and the door is closed the elevator should not be used, then the building design may need to include areas of refuge at the stair tower
At first I was thinking the stairs would definitely need an area of refuge. It’s been a while since I’ve read the code requirements on areas of refuge, I forgot about the exception for areas of refuge at stairs in buildings sprinklered with NFPA 13 or NFPA 13R systems (1009.3.3, Exception 2.)then the building design may need to include areas of refuge at the stair tower
Can you point me to an exception in the ADA or A117.1 that says this? I understand that a spring hinge is not a closer like the devices mounted at the top of a door and frame, but considering that it exerts a force against the effort to open the door I would have thought it would be considered a closer for the sake of door maneuvering clearances.2. If the door has spring hinges instead of a closer, no additional push side strike clearance is required for ADA compliance.