dbartley
REGISTERED
When calculating number of exits, the tables (in 2021 IBC and later) now state "MAXIMUM OCCUPANT LOAD OF SPACE" OR "MAXIMUM OCCUPANT LOAD PER STORY"When calculating the net occupant load of a room the math almost never results in a whole number. In those cases do you round your math up or down?
As an example, I do a lot of school work, and we typically try and keep classrooms under 1,000sf as to not require two exits and exit doors that have to swing in the direction of egress travel. But say you have a 985sf classroom with an occupant load factor of 1 person per 20sf. This works out to a calculated value of 49.25 people in that classroom. There is no such thing as ¼ of a person, and logic would say you can round down to 49 occupants. But it seems far more common for people to blanketly round up all calculations related to occupant loads.
I attended a chapter 10 egress seminar this past spring, the guest instructor was an ICC Staff member. I asked the instructor this question off-line during one of the breaks and he was in favor of rounding down.
So, I read that to mean if it's any decimal over 49, or 29, or whatever the maximum is for that occupancy, it needs a second exit.
For a third exit it states "from 501 to 1000," and four if any "greater than 1000." I would read those literally.