• Welcome to The Building Code Forum

    Your premier resource for building code knowledge.

    This forum remains free to the public thanks to the generous support of our Sawhorse Members and Corporate Sponsors. Their contributions help keep this community thriving and accessible.

    Want enhanced access to expert discussions and exclusive features? Learn more about the benefits here.

    Ready to upgrade? Log in and upgrade now.

Remote locking door hardware

McShan

Bronze Member
Joined
Sep 27, 2011
Messages
74
Location
Louisiana
The city I am working with is building a Bathroom at one of their parks and would like to be able to lock and unlock the building remotely. Is this possible and where can I find the specs and cost associated with the installation. Thanks in advance
 
There are lots of options depending on the preferred lock manufacturer and any existing access control software that's being used. I would recommend using an electromechanical lock - not an electromagnetic lock - so they don't have to worry about egress if someone is in the bathroom when the door gets locked. Another factor of which lock to choose is whether the bathroom is just one stall or multiple stalls. A local security integrator would be the best person to help choose the specific components of the system.
 
The city I am working with is building a Bathroom at one of their parks and would like to be able to lock and unlock the building remotely. Is this possible and where can I find the specs and cost associated with the installation. Thanks in advance
if the locking of the doors is after posted hours of park operation there is no issue.
 
if the locking of the doors is after posted hours of park operation there is no issue.

I'm curious about this...the IBC doesn't differentiate between occupied and unoccupied so I almost always default to hardware that allows free egress at all times. I've heard some horror stories about people getting locked in, and I even got locked in a stairwell myself once - it was a historic building and the exterior stair discharge door wouldn't open. I've also found that when a facility starts using security measures that don't allow free egress, it begins with after hours and eventually the security device is in place even when the building is occupied. That wouldn't be an issue with the restrooms in this post, but I just think it's a slippery slope.
 
I'm curious about this...the IBC doesn't differentiate between occupied and unoccupied so I almost always default to hardware that allows free egress at all times. I've heard some horror stories about people getting locked in, and I even got locked in a stairwell myself once - it was a historic building and the exterior stair discharge door wouldn't open. I've also found that when a facility starts using security measures that don't allow free egress, it begins with after hours and eventually the security device is in place even when the building is occupied. That wouldn't be an issue with the restrooms in this post, but I just think it's a slippery slope.
agreed
 
Back
Top