Yikes
SAWHORSE
Proposed church sanctuary, type V, A-3 occupancy, fully sprinklered. Sanctuary is on-grade, balcony is one level above it.
The balcony is open to the sanctuary, and has 2 means of egress (stairs) directly down into the main, on-grade sanctuary. The balcony sits on top of the lobby, but is NOT open to it, because there are doors that separate the lobby from the main sanctuary floor.
A mezzanine is allowed to be 50% of the area of the room in which it is located. CBC 505.2.
Now, the balcony is 65% of the sanctuary area alone, which is too big to call it a mezzanine. B
UT, it is only only 31% of the sanctuary + lobby area combined. So it works, if I count both the sanctuary AND the lobby in my ratio.
QUESTION: Can a balcony this big rightfully called a “mezzanine” if it doesn’t open to the lobby?
Under CBC 505.4 exception 5, a mezzanine doesn’t need to be open to the room in which it is located. Utilizing this, can the lobby therefore be enclosed, but we can still count the lobby with the sanctuary as part of “the room in which it [the mezzanine] is located”?
The balcony is open to the sanctuary, and has 2 means of egress (stairs) directly down into the main, on-grade sanctuary. The balcony sits on top of the lobby, but is NOT open to it, because there are doors that separate the lobby from the main sanctuary floor.
A mezzanine is allowed to be 50% of the area of the room in which it is located. CBC 505.2.
Now, the balcony is 65% of the sanctuary area alone, which is too big to call it a mezzanine. B
UT, it is only only 31% of the sanctuary + lobby area combined. So it works, if I count both the sanctuary AND the lobby in my ratio.
QUESTION: Can a balcony this big rightfully called a “mezzanine” if it doesn’t open to the lobby?
Under CBC 505.4 exception 5, a mezzanine doesn’t need to be open to the room in which it is located. Utilizing this, can the lobby therefore be enclosed, but we can still count the lobby with the sanctuary as part of “the room in which it [the mezzanine] is located”?