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First off, I get your point and agree... but no, not all exterior doors are intended for egress.If there is a door that leads from inside the building to the outside … pray tell what purpose does it serve other than egress? Decoration?
I did offer some examples above, even though I asked very similar question in other thread.If there is a door that leads from inside the building to the outside … pray tell what purpose does it serve other than egress? Decoration?
Certainly seems you were on other side before.But if you don’t mark the door with a lighted exit sign, or any signs … seems like you would not need full compliance.
If you have a space that requires 2 exit doors but has 12 exit doors, then only 2 doors need to be made "code compliant" with the provisions IBC chapter 10 'Means Of Egress'. You certainly would not have exit signs on the other 10 doors if you don't intend to use them for exiting.
If the door is required to be an exit for some reason under the code, it must meet all the requirements for an exit door.
If the door is signed as an exit, even if it is not required by code, it has to function like an exit (occupants cannot be expected to spot a "fake" signed exit).
If it is what most people call a convenience door and is not signed as an exit, I don't care what you do with it, provided it does not violate other code provisions.
TM has the best synopsis.....No AHJ should be making you do what the code does not.
I’m taking lessons from my wife.Certainly seems you were on other side before.
ice - I agree with your point of view, but you leave out an important few words which others use to justify not treating additional as exit doors, namely "Doors provided for egress purposes in numbers greater than required by this code shall meet the requirements of this section."
Again, I agree that these additional doors to exterior should meet the code requirements as if they were provided for egress. I believe in the other thread the consensus was that if someone - owner, architect, tennant, othere - makes the case that they are not "provided for egress purposes" then no requirements comply.
Done……ICE - I said early in other thread what you say here, which was a minority opinion. Wish you were as emphatic in that thread as you are in this one.
Count the posters and their views in other thread. Majority feel you it's fine to have a door to exterior which is not required for MOE not comply with code requirements.
If not provided for egress WTF is it intended for? Based on over a 100 projects in nearly as many jurisdictions, I don't recall on building department that would allow a non-compliant door no matter what anyone insisted it was intended for.
The issue I have with the argument that people see a door in an emergency and blindly go through it, is simply false. The numbers change somewhat, but the numbers I've heard thrown around by fire engineers are that about 90% of people try to go back out the door they came in, in an emergency.1010.1 Doors. Means of egress doors shall meet the requirements of this section. Doors serving a means of egress system shall meet the requirements of this section and Section 1022.2. Doors provided for egress purposes in numbers greater than required by this code shall meet the requirements of this section.
It does come down to who determines the purpose of a door. The purpose of a door is obvious. To assume that a door that is in addition to the required means of egress door need not meet the requirements of a means of egress door simply because an entity has determined that said door was not provided for egress purposes …. That’s just wrong.
How about the homeowners that tell you that no smoke alarm is required in that bedroom because they are using it as an office. Did that bedroom magically become not a bedroom. Didn’t happen did it. It didn’t happen because there is no reason to rely on the the occupants to respect the designation as an office and not use it as a bedroom. It is after all a bedroom.
Providing doors that do not meet the same requirements as a “means of egress system” doors Is legal as long as it is not possible to “egress“ through the door. Well then, what is the definition of egress through a door? My conclusion is that egressing a space means exiting that space.
I’ll provide an example. A nightclub is required to have four exits. The club has six doors to the exterior. Four of the doors open in the direction of travel and two swing in. All but the blind people see the six doors. The people don’t perform a mental exercise to decide which doors are the required egress doors…you know, much as the architect did. No, not at all. They see the doors….they know that the other side of the door is outside.
Now unfortunately a pyrotechnic display ignites the ceiling. People are fleeing. The people that found the four required exit doors got out. The people that found the extra exit doors that swung in were found later that night.
Buildings will present individual situations. Residential as opposed to commercial, etc. The final arbiter is the occupant that opens the door. An absolute exception applied to doors over and above the required number of doors due to semantics is not just wrong but is also unjustifiable.
So if everyone comes in a door that is not provided for egress, swings in, has a complicated lock, and no landing, that's OK?people try to go back out the door they came in
1. Main entry doors have to be an exit in our code and meet certain capacity requirements for the entire suite (I would presume it is similar in yours). There is a capacity exception for buildings like malls (which entrance is the "main entrance"???).So if everyone comes in a door that is not provided for egress, swings in, has a complicated lock, and no landing, that's OK?
You mention office doors and janitors closets, but this has generally been about doors to the exterior, in exterior walls, and for the most part having access to the public way.
Not all doors in an exterior wall are for exiting some may be for fire department accessIf there are doors in exterior walls providing access to the public way but not provided for egress, what are they provided for?
What I find interesting about this is that if this was at a nightclub for 49 occupants and I was the first one to reach the door, the code assumes I would be able to overcome the force of 48 other people pressing in behind me so that I can swing the door inward; but hey, 50 people pressing behind me is just too much to handle.Now unfortunately a pyrotechnic display ignites the ceiling. People are fleeing. The people that found the four required exit doors got out. The people that found the extra exit doors that swung in were found later that night.
Buildings will present individual situations. Residential as opposed to commercial, etc. The final arbiter is the occupant that opens the door. An absolute exception applied to doors over and above the required number of doors due to semantics is not just wrong but is also unjustifiable.
Which is why I said with access to the public way.Many times I see exterior doors to loading docks without a stairway to grade and to fenced in storage areas. I would not make these be a means of egress.
Who cares? Code says what is says. That is what I can enforce. When the code provides clear and concise language like it does here, there is little room for interpretation.1. Might not be main entrance, just the one nearest free street parking that employees use, and are familiar with.
2. If the door complied, with hardware, size, landings, swing, signage, etc., it would be easy.
If there are doors in exterior walls providing access to the public way but not provided for egress, what are they provided for? Future tenant build out perhaps, but when built out, they'd probably have to comply and would be provided for egress.
I'd be curious what staff says.
Really? When your interp is far from a majority opinion? I don't take exception to your other thoughts but the code is anything but "clear and concise" on this.When the code provides clear and concise language
Using the majority to base your opinion off of is a logical fallacy called appeal to majority. Basically, it is the belief that since the majority of people believe something it must be true. A good example of this is when most people believed the Earth was the center of the solar system. It was not and they were all wrong.Really? When your interp is far from a majority opinion? I don't take exception to your other thoughts but the code is anything but "clear and concise" on this.
If codes were not created for peoples safety … then why do they exist? What is the purpose of EERO? Handrails on stairs? GFCI outlets?, other than the concern for people's safety, which is coincidentally another logical fallacy called appeal to emotion.