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The last one we had go up was exactly like this except it was fire house/ambulance with helipadhlfireinspector said:Just finshed building new station:Bay S-1
Offices B
Living quarters R-2
Fully sprinklered NFPA 13
The original design for ours called out a climbing wall. It didn't quite make the budget cuts.gbhammer said:The last one we had go up was exactly like this except it was fire house/ambulance with helipad
Yes 3 means three handicapp bathrooms in building and the one of the 5 in the bed hall has a handicapp shower. Now to drive point home we have a handicapp EMA director that works in building from 8-5 mon-friday.hlfireinspector said:With handicapp bathroom in quarters (with shower) and in offices and front lobby (Yes 3)
The previous post indicated you need three "handicap" accessible bathrooms. You do not. How many "bathrooms" do you have?gbhammer said:Mark I thought all bathing rooms had to be accessible?2009 IBC
1109.2 Toilet and bathing facilities. Each toilet room and bathing
room shall be accessible.
The word "semantics" itself denotes a range of ideas, from the popular to the highly technical. It is often used in ordinary language to denote a problem of understanding that comes down to word selection or connotation. This problem of understanding has been the subject of many formal inquiries, over a long period of time, most notably in the field of formal semantics.mark handler said:The previous post indicated you need three "handicap" accessible bathrooms. You do not. How many "bathrooms" do you have?Toilet rooms or restrooms are not the same as bathrooms or bathing facilities.
It's a matter of "semantics” is the real meaning is being lost in verbiage
Fire Station has seven "water closets" total. Three of these are accessible and one has accessible shower. The front lobby of the station has an accessible "water closet". The Fire bedhall has four water closets with showers one of which is accessible. The Battalion bed hall has a water closet. The office area also contains a small meeting room for public use and FD training and the water closet that servers this area is accessible. I did not say this many water closets was required but there is nothing wrong with going above the code requirements.mark handler said:The previous post indicated you need three "handicap" accessible bathrooms. You do not. How many "bathrooms" do you have?Toilet rooms or restrooms are not the same as bathrooms or bathing facilities.
It's a matter of "semantics” is the real meaning is being lost in verbiage
Especially when you tell them the fire pole isn't code compliant:beatdhrs.......this is going to be fun......:smile:
The Pole does not need to be in compliance, "an" accessible POT does.mtlogcabin said:Especially when you tell them the fire pole isn't code compliant:beatdhrs
You have a general rule, for general occupancies, that says less than 3,000 sf, accessibility not required and you have specific interpretations and requirements that says it does.steveray said:FURTHER COMPLICATING OUR ISSUES, WE HAVE.....(Add) 1103.2.16 Mezzanines. Mezzanines having fewer than 3,000 square feet of gross floor area, either singly or in the aggregate for multiple mezzanines on any floor are not required to be accessible and are not required to be located on an accessible route, provided that the goods and services available on any mezzanine shall be available in accessible areas.
Any ADA input on that Mark?
Your right it is that big hole in the floor that needs a 42" guard around it and maybe even a fire rated opening protect between the uses they really don't likemark handler said:The Pole does not need to be in compliance, "an" accessible POT does.
http://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=INTERPRETATIONS&p_id=20688mtlogcabin said:Your right it is that big hole in the floor that needs a 42" guard around it and maybe even a fire rated opening protect between the uses they really don't like