This building is messy. There is an existing building. The existing building consists of a basement and 1st floor. There is an elevator in the existing building serving both levels. An addition is proposed. It consists of a 1st floor and 2nd floor. It also has an elevator. The existing building elevator does not serve the addition's 2nd floor. The addition's elevator does not serve the existing basement. Plus, the addition has a large public assembly space that has 2 required exits. One of those exits has a path that goes through a stair enclosure that deposits the occupants to the exterior at an exterior area for rescue assistance (EAAR), which also serves as the AMOE from the 2nd floor.
The addition's 2nd floor has two exit access stairs, stair 1 being the aforementioned stair that utilizes the EAAR. That path is now a compliant AMOE. Stair 2, also a compliant AMOE, deposits the occupants to the 1st floor, then on to a ramp. So after they installed the EAAR at the stair 1 discharge they have two compliant AMOE's from the building and the public assembly. On my first review they did not have the EAAR, so they only had one compliant AMOE from the building, and only one from the public assembly space. They did not show me the accessible route from the building nor the AMOE's. So if the new elevator was an AMOE, and the 2nd stair was an AMOE they would have had two compliant AMOE's from the building, but only one from the public assembly space. Commenting that they needed a 2nd AMOE from the public assembly space was certain, and it would also serve as the 2nd AMOE from the 2nd floor. However, they still have not shown the accessible route, nor the intended AMOE's, so I don't know if the elevator can also serve as, or was intended as an AMOE. Where I am stuck is this: They have two compliant AMOE's, so them showing me what their intent for the accessible route and AMOE's is academic. But I still have the elevator, which is not required to be an AMOE since they have two already. But if 1009.8 requires coms either way, they need to know this.
If 1009.1 is limiting everything in the section that follows to compliance only if they are an AMOE why does 1009.3 say "in order to be considered a part of the AMOE"? If 1109.8 was intended to only apply to an elevator that is part of the AMOE, should it not also say something similar? Such as "where an elevator serves as a part of the AMOE a two-way communications shall be provided"?
Code is not perfect, so I try to find the intent. It seems the intent is that all the requirements that follow 1009.1 are only applicable if they are an AMOE. But then I see individual requirements that specify "in order to be considered". In my world, they don't need to do that, or they need to do that everywhere. In 1009.3, if they were consistent with the language in 1109.8 they would say "A stairway between stories...." without the qualifier. Or, in 1009.8, to be consistent with 1009.3, they would say "where an elevator is a part of the AMOE, a two-way communications system complying with....." with the qualifier.
My thinking is that of Yankee, that 1009 provides requirements for an AMOE, and nothing beyond. But I also had the same thought as RLGA, which is how a person makes a notification if they are sitting at an elevator. Because there are compliant stairs, in a sprinklered building, there is no other requirement anywhere for that notification as far as I can tell. So I have to wonder if this is the catch so that in the event someone is stuck, they can make the call. Or is it just a different code, written at a different time, with different, inconsistent language?
Commentary makes me lean towards the idea that it is required no matter what, but again, this is commentary to a section that MAY only apply to the AMOE.
In multistory buildings, unless provided in areas of
refuge, a two-way communication system must be
located at the elevator landing of each accessible
floor level other than the level of exit discharge. The
system is intended to offer a means of communication
to individuals with mobility impairment, either permanent
or temporary, who need assistance during an
emergency situation.