Apurva Dave
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Is party wall a firewall or not a firewall?
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Is party wall a firewall or not a firewall?
Apartment complex one owner with different three floors units each joined by party wall but over one cluster. The party wall has conduit and wiring going to each dwelling unit within each units existing from electrical room from within one of the units. NEC allows this provided they have proper fire rated penetration means on the adjacent walls. (NEC ref: 300.21). Their is No mention of party wall and that cannot have no opening in NEC except in IBC. Building code issue not NEC issue.So what is the setting?
What is the wall there for?
What you have described does not sound like a party wall at all--it is a dwelling unit separation wall, which is required to be a fire partition. The rating is required to be 1 hour but is allowed to be reduced to 30 minutes if the construction type complies with Type IIB, IIIB, or VB. Penetrations in a fire partition are required to comply with IBC Section 714.Apartment complex one owner with different three floors units each joined by party wall but over one cluster. The party wall has conduit and wiring going to each dwelling unit within each units existing from electrical room from within one of the units. NEC allows this provided they have proper fire rated penetration means on the adjacent walls. (NEC ref: 300.21). Their is No mention of party wall and that cannot have no opening in NEC except in IBC. Building code issue not NEC issue.
Confirmed like three times with the engineer says it’s party wall but all this is existingWhat you have described does not sound like a party wall at all--it is a dwelling unit separation wall, which is required to be a fire partition. The rating is required to be 1 hour but is allowed to be reduced to 30 minutes if the construction type complies with Type IIB, IIIB, or VB. Penetrations in a fire partition are required to comply with IBC Section 714.
Then I don't think the engineer knows the definition of a party wall as it applies to the building code.Confirmed like three times with the engineer says it’s party wall but all this is existing
I don’t think you understand. Let’s say I have bldg #1,#2,#3,#4,#5#6 same owner.What you have described does not sound like a party wall at all--it is a dwelling unit separation wall, which is required to be a fire partition. The rating is required to be 1 hour but is allowed to be reduced to 30 minutes if the construction type complies with Type IIB, IIIB, or VB. Penetrations in a fire partition are required to comply with IBC Section 714.
Bldgs #1 to #6 is one join cluster apartment complexI don’t think you understand. Let’s say I have bldg #1,#2,#3,#4,#5#6 same owner.
Bldgs #1 to #6 are joined together each with party wall.
Each bldg is three floors and attic with dwelling units. Bldg #3 has electrical room and meter stacks. Feeders from meter stack go up attic bldg #3 and then penetrate the party wall and go to bldg#1,2,4,5,6 to individual dewelling unit panelboard.
Unless each "building" is situated on a separate lot, then it is not a party wall. If each "building" was divided to stay within allowable height and area requirements, then it is a fire wall. Or, if each "building" is separated for design reasons (e.g., access to a single exit), then they are not really separate buildings, and the walls can be treated as fire partitions. Just because the owner may have labeled each section as a "building," does not necessarily make them separate buildings per the building code.I don’t think you understand. Let’s say I have bldg #1,#2,#3,#4,#5#6 same owner.
Bldgs #1 to #6 are joined together each with party wall.
Each bldg is three floors and attic with dwelling units. Bldg #3 has electrical room and meter stacks. Feeders from meter stack go up attic bldg #3 and then penetrate the party wall and go to bldg#1,2,4,5,6 to individual dewelling unit panelboard.
I don’t think you understand. Let’s say I have bldg #1,#2,#3,#4,#5#6 same owner.
Bldgs #1 to #6 are joined together each with party wall.
Each bldg is three floors and attic with dwelling units. Bldg #3 has electrical room and meter stacks. Feeders from meter stack go up attic bldg #3 and then penetrate the party wall and go to bldg#1,2,4,5,6 to individual dewelling unit panelboard.
Would fire partition be form of firewall or not?
No, a fire partition is the least restrictive fire-rated assembly per the IBC, whereas a fire wall is the most restrictive.Would fire partition be form of firewall or not?
Engineer says it goes from foundation all the way up to roof between each bldg. would that make it fire partition?
It could. Again, it depends on the purpose of the wall. Fire walls make big buildings into smaller buildings to stay within the allowable height and area for a given construction type. If the aggregate area of all "buildings" is within the allowable area for the construction type, then the walls need only be fire partitions.Engineer says it goes from foundation all the way up to roof between each bldg. would that make it fire partition?
To answer your question: we don't have enough information.Primary and ultimate purpose here is to know each building is separate bldgs or not. NEC allows only one service to each bldgs and no exception applies.
NEC defines bldg as:
Building. A structure that stands alone or that is cut off from adjoining structures by fire walls with all openings therein protected by approved fire doors.
Do the walls fit the NEC building definition to be separate buildings?
One has to look from NEC perspective since NEC says each building supply with one service and definition of building as stated earlier in NEC.
so if there are firewalls each buildings then by NEC each building is separate buildings allows each building with service. Only NEC is involved here