Yikes
SAWHORSE
Picture a conventional wood-framed building with parapets and a “flat” (1/2” per foot low slope) roof. The roof assembly is built-up roofing over plywood deck, over 2x or TJIs with batt insulation between, over a fire-rated gyp board membrane. In other words, the indoor ceiling is directly attached to the underside of the rafters.
I see this all the time on apartment buildigns in the southern California area, right? But how come I almost never see ventilation for the individual rafter spaces?
In re-reading IBC 1203.2 in sounds like I should have to individually vent each rafter bay. Yet when you walk these roofs, I typically don’t see ridge vents, nor rows of mushroom vents (one per bay), nor do I see a louver vent on the outside face of the parapet. The IBC commentary does not directly address parapet building situations; the illustrations only show buildings with eaves.
What am I missing here?
I know such ventilation was at the building official’s discretion in the 2001 UBC 1505.3. Was it simply a non-issue on parapet buildings?
Does that continue to be the case in the 2009 IBC?
I see this all the time on apartment buildigns in the southern California area, right? But how come I almost never see ventilation for the individual rafter spaces?
In re-reading IBC 1203.2 in sounds like I should have to individually vent each rafter bay. Yet when you walk these roofs, I typically don’t see ridge vents, nor rows of mushroom vents (one per bay), nor do I see a louver vent on the outside face of the parapet. The IBC commentary does not directly address parapet building situations; the illustrations only show buildings with eaves.
What am I missing here?
I know such ventilation was at the building official’s discretion in the 2001 UBC 1505.3. Was it simply a non-issue on parapet buildings?
Does that continue to be the case in the 2009 IBC?