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Should be…I have a single car garage with a sectional overhead door, I have space on one stucco wall for a 24 x 75 pedestrian door. will that size be acceptable since it is not the main egress door?
Really? If the overhead door is down and locked, the only egress is the 24” door.Should be…
And…got a code section?Really? If the overhead door is down and locked, the only egress is the 24” door.
Do you have a section that allows the only egress being a 24” door?And…got a code section?
So for the question posed by the OP for a detached garage, only one pedestrian door is required and it must be 36”.And then beyond that there is only one 36” door required and all the rest can be 12”…
Isn’t that an oxymoron? How can it be common and rare?Common exceptions (very rare)
No…none are required…it is not a dwelling…So for the question posed by the OP for a detached garage, only one pedestrian door is required and it must be 36”.
<10 OL doesn’t require the swinging door in IBC land…Just for the sake of discussion, would a "person door" be required if this was regulated by the building code instead of the residential code?
Joe, how would that be different from commercial storage units with only a roll-up door for access?Just for the sake of discussion, would a "person door" be required if this was regulated by the building code instead of the residential code?
That's the question, and a perfect example.Joe, how would that be different from commercial storage units with only a roll-up door for access?
You make it sound like you just performed a valiant deed like you're robin hood or something. I find this renegade outlaw attitude offensive and distasteful. You're not some Judge Dredd building code hero; you're just an a-hole know-it-all out there giving this industry a bad rep. But I suspect you know that, enjoy it, and wear it like a badge...I had a large man come to the office with a question about the size of a bathroom door. His wife was dead set on a particular vanity that allowed a 20" door and not larger. The man would have to find a different bathroom. He was crestfallen to learn that there was no minimum size for a bathroom door. I understood, and I wasn't even married at that time. So woefully dismayed was he that I wrote a correction slip to say that the minimum size of a bathroom door is 32".
It's not that often that a good deed has an immediate reward ... his smile said it all.

Joe, how would that be different from commercial storage units with only a roll-up door for access?
1010.1.2 Egress door types. Egress doors shall be of the1010.1 General. Doors in the means of egress shall comply
with the requirements of Sections 10 l 0.1. l through l 010.3.4.
Exterior exit doors shall also comply with the requirements of
Section 1022.2. Gates in the means of egress shall comply
with the requirements of Sections 1010.4 and 1010.4.1. Turnstiles
in the means of egress shall comply with the
requirements of Sections 1010.5 through 1010.5.4.
There are exceptions, but not one that addresses the scenario you present. Great and interesting question. Not a hill I would die on, but interesting.
So let the contractor read the code book and find the correct section.You make it sound like you just performed a valiant deed like you're robin hood or something.