Yikes
SAWHORSE
I’m seeing more and more articles and social media videos critiquing the requirement for 2 means of egress from multistory apartment buildings. Here’s another recent example. What do you think?
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That was 24 stories. May have had 2 stairs for 120 units. Did you miss the part about 3 or 4 or at most 6 stories? Pretty sure not sprinklered. Grenfel Tower was not close to being comparable to what the video proposes.How many people dies in that apartment building fire in England?
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Grenfell Tower fire - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
72 died, most because they couldn't get out.
Because buildings that look like that can't have two means of egress??? Has a lot more to do with aesthetics than safety.
I will (somewhat) counter that by saying most "couldn't get out" because they were told to stay in place by the fire fighters and building owners (a standard practice for buildings like this in the area at the time). The extremely flammable exterior cladding added during the renovations in 2015-2016, as well as city council (allegedly) ignoring fire safety requirements (like sprinklers) had more to do with the death toll than the number of exits, at least in my opinion.How many people dies in that apartment building fire in England?
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Grenfell Tower fire - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
72 died, most because they couldn't get out.
The City of Seattle WA has an amendment that allows for this... and I know there is a broader interest and several other states/city's are looking at similar.
See Condition #7
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@Yankee Chronicler, I see and agree with you on the points raised regarding the video... but I am interested to hear your perspective on the language I shared from the City of Seattle. What do you think about such an amendment, particularly if it were brought as a code change proposal to the model codes?
Lemmings do tend to follow each other to their deaths.....From what I hear the Seattle amendment also had something to do with FD response time...The City of Seattle WA has an amendment that allows for this... and I know there is a broader interest and several other states/city's are looking at similar.
See Condition #7
View attachment 12291View attachment 12292
It's a Canadian project. What does it have to do with IBC?I completely reject the opening premise of that video: that developers choose to develop an entire block with a single building solely because the code requires multiple exit stairs. With an opening statement like that, you can be pretty well assured that everything to follow will be B.S.
IBC Table 1006.3.4(1) establishes that up to three stories above grade an R-2 structure can have a single exit for up to four dwelling units per story, with a maximum exit access travel distance of 125 feet. The single exit provision also requires an NFPA 13 or 13R sprinkler system, and emergency escape/rescue openings.
If this group think this is such a huge problem, instead of uploading videos to YouTube they should be submitting a code change proposal to the ICC, and spend their YouTube production money on developing fire safety statistics to demonstrate that allowing a single exit for buildings up to 4/5/6 stories is safe enough to be allowed by code.
Yeah, there's nothing like showing a hotel room and using that to "prove" that you can't do apartments in certain types of buildings.
09:38 -- I doubt it's a coincidence that the building he chose to visit as an example is a cohousing building. For any of you who don't recognize the term, "cohousing" is a movement that was popular 20 to 30 years ago that was based on a more or less communal living model. Each family in a cohousing development would have a private dwelling unit, but the prototypical communities were based on shared amenities like cooking and dining facilities, and then individual communities might decide to add other common amenities such as maybe a swimming pool, an art studio, a shop facility, a computer center, etc. I knew an architect (from California, naturally) who was a proponent of cohousing development. It's not too strong a word to say that he was fanatical.
Bottom line: I don't think an apartment building for a cohousing group represents a fair example. We don't know what the communal parameters were that the group established. They may not have been at all suitable for commercial, for-profit rental apartments.
It's a Canadian project. What does it have to do with IBC?
I suspect that functioning sprinklers would function better than 2 egress stairs separated by 20 ft in a small walk-up square plan apartment building.I’m seeing more and more articles and social media videos critiquing the requirement for 2 means of egress from multistory apartment buildings. Here’s another recent example. What do you think?
That building was illegally modified to include a fully combustible fladding system that created a chimney vertical plenum that immediately carried flames from the bottom to the top of the tower. It was a total failure of design and no matter how many exits that building had, people were going to die.How many people dies in that apartment building fire in England?
![]()
Grenfell Tower fire - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
72 died, most because they couldn't get out.
In larger buildings, separated egress access stairs are important. However, I have seen some developers build fire-separated scissor stairs that helix around each other, providing (2) means of egress within the footprint of (1) stair core.
Admittedly, in (Canadian) NBC, there is no requirement for an egress window in a sprinklered building.I've often wondered why there isn't more of an interaction between sprinklering a building and egress requirements.
IMHO
First, since when does a Canadian YouTuber constitute the "media"? Secondly, did anyone watch the entire video from beginning to end and absorb the message? Canada is more restrictive on this than the US, which may have been his point. However, he has a larger audience if he references North America, so I think that was a marketing decision on his end.
I believe there are some extremely valid points that were made in the video. The responses I am reading here suggest that not many watched the entire video with an open, unbiased mind and reflected on its points before posting.
That would be a problem for sure. How does someone verify that is true?The creator of this video was sponsored/fronted/supported by a non-profit collective in Vancouver, BC, funded by (surprise) developers and architects.