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Occupancy Designation (Global vs Area)

EasilyConfused

Bronze Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2016
Messages
48
Location
South Carolina
1st post. Need help getting my head wrapped around some basics. Sorry so LOOOOONG.

In studying the code, it appears to me that an individual space can be designated as (Say S-2 or A-3) for the space itself, BUT if it's part of a mixed use occupancy could fall under the umbrella of "B" for purposes of establishing the primary occupancy. I'm having a hard time getting my head wrapped around the reasons for Occupancy global use vs Occupancy individual room use.

Current building under consideration:

Single story, & the building is about half "B" with the other half "A-3" (can't be "B" because of size) and another smaller portion that is S-2 (can't be "B" because of size).

I'm currently thinking that even though the building will be classified as a mixed use occupancy, The primary occupancy will/should be designated as "B" because, in my mind, that will be the primary use as the "A-3" area will only be used for that purpose on a relatively limited basis. The S-2 area is storage for chairs, tables and such so, again subordinate to the B occupancy.

Am I correct so far?

So, even though the primary occupancy would be established as B, to figure out occupant loads, I need to do individual calculations for the three areas and total these up to arrive at the total occupancy.

Is this correct?

If so, then this is relatively easy for me to understand, and I can use this info (based on sizes of these individual occupancies to establish whether fire separation is required, number of exits req’d, etc based on decisions I make as to separated or non-separated mixed use occupancy, accessory use, incidental use etc.

Here’s where I get confused:

Handling of the large assembly and storage spaces is “easy” to understand because, for all practical purposes, they are individual spaces when compared to the Business designated component of the building where “gross” calculations are used that would include corridors, toilets etc. in the mix. Meaning to do occupant load for B, I include and add up ALL the B space, including accessory use spaces, corridors, toilets etc….. even if those toilets etc are used by occupants in the A3 & S2 occupancy areas.

Now let’s say I have a A 303.1.2_2 “small assembly space” (maybe a smaller conference room) that is under 750SF in addition to the large assembly space (say the large A-3 training room above). Well the smaller space doesn’t have to be designated as “A”, and therefor now becomes a part of the “B” occupancy…..

Therefor that same space would now fall under the umbrella of “B” for figuring out the total occupant load of the building (where the three larger occupancy calculations are added together)….. I think.

So, in the process, now I’ve figured out the total occupant load (combined B, A-3, and S-2), but still have to do individual room area calculations based on occupancy type, in order to determine means of egress requirements. Again, I think. If so, procedure takes me to table 1004.1.2, which lists a lot of individual room use functions that would generally fall under a broader category when determining building occupancy types. So, question is, even though the “small assembly space” falls under the B umbrella for the building occupant loads, does it have to get redesignated as an individual space that is now assembly and calculated individually by table 1004.1.2 or does it remain a B space and is calculated as such by table 1004.1.2?

Similar question surrounding, say, a small coat closet in the “B” area. Does it stay business or does it become “S” for purposes of calculations related to means of egress requirements?

For me to understand this better, I’m wondering about/ thinking that there are 2 separate issues here and they both need to be treated individually, so in my mind, yes, a space could be designated B for determining total occupant load, but would revert back to say, assembly further into the process of code analysis.

Meaning, I establish Primary Building Occupancy, and Mixed Use Occupancy to come up with project criteria for Size of building and separation required and I use individual room occupancies (designated as their real function) to establish egress requirements for a particular portion of the building.

So, say in the business portion of the project I have 2 corrridors where half of the offices (and any accessory spaces) ONLY use one corridor and the other half of the offices (and any accessory spaces) use the other corridor. The way I would go about breaking the whole business space up would be to globally assign business to only the areas accessing one corridor or the other (which would include toilets, the corridor itself, offices etc, and do gross calcualtions for the business specific components of that area of the building, but I would need to separate out any area that is assembly (even though under 750 sf or less than 50 occupants) from the B part but add the occupant load back in with the combined B area to establish total occupant load for that particular corridor.

If this is correct then I think I’m starting to understand this a little. Hopefully this is the case.

Probably a separate question but related….

If I’m understanding all of the above correctly then one other aspect that has me confused is how to handle that same corridor for all those offices and all those assembly spaces if the corridor has 2 exits. Do you assign half of the total occupant load for that area of the building to each of the doors, or can this kind of be finagled in certain proportions to possible advantage. In the end are you basically just presenting what occupants from what rooms you anticipate that would likely use a particular exit and assign that number to the exit? Assuming that however the occupants are rationed out per door, in the end, total occupant load for the building area the corridor serves would need to total whatever the doors etc can handle.

If you were able to get through all (or even some of this) thanks for looking! Hopefully I’m not way out in never never land.
 
""""If you were able to get through all (or even some of this) thanks for looking! Hopefully I’m not way out in never never land."""""

NO

So what kind of business is this???

Is it a regular office with a meeting room and storage area??

Will you post sq ft for each area
 
Occupancy group classification and function of space for purposes of determining occupant load are two separate things.

​A space can be classified as a Group B occupancy, but still have an assembly function per Table 1004.1.2. If a space is used for assembly purposes, then the appropriate assembly load factor per Table 1004.1.2 is used. If the assembly space is less than 750 sq. ft., then the occupant load is still determined per Table 1004.1.2 as an assembly function, but the area would be classified as a Group B occupancy or the occupancy in which it is a part. Similarly, if the occupant load factor for an assembly function provides an occupant load that is less than 50, then the area can be classified as a Group B occupancy or the occupancy in which it is a part. However, in either case, the occupant load factor used for the space does not change just because the occupancy group is not a Group A. If neither of those conditions apply, then the spaces are classified in one of the appropriate Group A occupancies.

For corridors, include that as a part of the major occupancy. If Group B is the predominant occupancy group, then consider the corridors part of the Group B. Since corridors are not assembly areas, the corridors should be included in the gross floor area for determining business area functions per Table 1004.1.2. A similar approach is used regarding toilet facilities. If they support all occupancies, then consider them part of the predominant occupancy group and include them in the gross floor area occupant load factor. However, if they only support the assembly occupancy, then they don't need to be factored into the assembly occupant load since assembly functions are based on net floor area.

Storage areas should be classified as either Group S-1 or S-2 based on the materials being stored and the appropriate load factor based on function of space from Table 1004.1.2 is used to determine the occupant load of those areas.

If a space is considered an incidental use per Table 509, then it is classified per the occupancy group in which it is located, but the occupant load factor used should be based on its function per Table 1004.1.2.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
It's general office spaces (multiple) + training building of sorts. Assembly area will be used for training, conferences, and also gatherings where food will be served for related business/coworker/family functions.

No leased space but functions specific to occupants.

Assembly area has a "Service Kitchen" adjacent to it..... No hood req'd.... Mostly catered food service.

A-3 Assembly Area 2500SF +/-

B Business Area 2500SF +/-

S-2 Storage Area 145SF +/-
 
RLGA & CDA- Thanks for the interest & walking me through this.

So, when I'm calculating my occupant loads:

It doesn't matter what the Occupancy Group Classification is.

It only matters what "function of space" heading the individual space or area falls under in table 1004.1.2.

So, to do my occupant load calculations, I simply assign every space a corresponding occupant load factor for it's use.

Doesn't matter how big or small the space is (If it's a 3x5 closet it's still storage and a 10 x10 conference room or lobby is still assembly and they require an individual occupant load factor.

Most spaces you do calculations for will be individual rooms (In this case Storage, Assembly, etc). Simply calculate the gross or net area for that room and divide by the factor to determine the occupant load.

Some spaces could be multiple rooms (In this case Business use areas which would include offices, corridors, toilets.... and that's probably about it, because most other rooms would have a designation in table 1004.1.2 that would need to be assigned. For these type gross areas, simply total up the entire gross area for the business category and divide by it's factor. So my understanding would then be that there would not be any need to break out the areas of the individual rooms for the occupant load
 
(cont) ..........calculations for the overall business area.

Then, to calculate total occupant load for the building, simply add up all the individual space types total occupant loads.
 
About right

I normally look at a building, if most of it is say office, I just take the entire sq ft and divide. Not worry about calculating each space.

90 % of the time you can get away with it. Just comes to matter when you hit requirements that go by a certain number, like rated corridors, 2nd exit, panic hardware, door swing, etc

When it comes down to that, than get a precise number.
 
On this topic, In PA, IEBC/IBC 2009 - complete change of use. restaurant less than 50 inside, less than 750 sq/ft inside + 30 outside. More than 50 total. - B use? or A2?

If this is a B use, use the plumbing requirement for A2 ? 1per 75, sexed, male, female or B, unisex 1/25, 2/50, 3/100.
 
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