Smoke compartments similar to exits, have there own travel distance requirements. Not only in healthcare do we have to travel to exit it we also have a requirement to travel to a smoke compartment door/wall. Even if for standing at the exit door we can see daylight, we still have to be able to travel lesson 200 feet to a smoke compartment door without having to go outside.
Tag: NFPA
Building Code, Smoke Compartments
Smoke Compartments what are they 31-0
by Marty •
Smoker Compartments are unique to Healthcare, Penitentiary. It allows the facility to defend in place i.e. not evacuate the building it also helps protect those people incapable of self preservation. Healthcare patients and persons in prison, incarcerated cannot evacuate on their own nor do we actually want them to. As for prisoners we do not want to release them into the public. As for healthcare we want to be able to keep our loved ones on emergency power i.e. the ventilator in a protected environment and/or medical gases to help keep them alive. These items are not available outside therefore we want to evacuate them i.e. move them to another part of the building another smoke compartment
ARE, Building Code, Common Path, Dead End, Deadend, Exit, NFPA, Suites, Travel distance, Travel path
Deadend & Common Path of Travel 30-0
by Marty •
Deadend and Common Path of Travel can be confusing. Hope this video can help with some of its understanding. Most of the time we have a choice of two ways to get out of a SPACE, and that is your common path of travel. From the most remote point in the building or space to a decision point to go to exit “A” or exit “B” to get out of the space, that is your decision point/common path of travel.
Understand that “commen path of travel” is not appiclible to hospitals. Hospitals have “suites” and “intervening rooms” other video cover those topics
Building Code, facility guidelines, Isolation rooms, NFPA
Air Balance HVAC 29-0
by Marty •
With the Ebola issues I have been asked to explain “Air Balance” in hospitals and Isolations room several time. This video is on understanding isolation rooms and how the supply and return air works. I have been asked a couple times to explain this at work so I decided to do a video on it. The question was coming up concerning Ebola. We design hospitals, and I was being asked why cannot any hospital handle in Ebola patient. Essentially the answer is anyone can, some facilities/very few facilities have additional safeguards put in place as it relates to the infrastructure of the building that makes it easier. Isolation rooms with anti-rooms and then anti-rooms to anti-rooms provides an additional level where staff can change clothes and be monitored.
Building Code, Dead End, Deadend, Door, Exit, Exiting, NFPA, Suites, Travel distance
Suites Why 28-0
by Marty •
I have been asked many times why should someone try to create a suite. In 27-0 & 27-1 I talk a little about why, helping prevent DeadEnd Corridors or the understanding of what a sweet is. This video covers why you would want a suite within a healthcare environment how much money could potentially be saved by our clients. Also not first cost, but long-term inspection cost is money to be saved.
Building Code, Dead End, Deadend, Door, Exit, Exiting, stair Design, Suites, Travel distance, Travel path
Suites 27-0
by Marty •
This video is covering suites in both IBC and N both before the year 2012 code. In the 2012 code, the requirements change. Sense CMS is still under NFPA 2000 and a lot of jurisdictions have not adopted the 2012 building code, this video covers everything before 2012. Because we are required to follow the stringent of the codes, and this video covers that. The next video will cover you are able to apply all the requirements from 2012 in both codes..
ARE, Building Code, Extinguisher, Fire Protection
Sprinkler Head painted 26-0
by Marty •
Painting sprinkler heads, can you paint the fire sprinkler’s head, can you paint the sprinkler head escutcheon or cover plate.
ARE, Extinguisher, Fire Extinguisher Labeling, Fire Protection
Fire Extinguisher Labeling 25-0
by Marty •
Fire extinguisher classifications/labeling what kind of fire extinguisher to put out your standard home fires. What kind of extinguisher will put out ordinary wood and clothing and what kind of fire extinguisher is best for only electrical fires. Is there a special fire extinguisher for MRI, yes the housing should be nonferrous/non-magnetic.
Building Code, Door, Exit, Exiting, Fire Protection, stair Design, Type of Construction
Door & Shutter Protection Rating 24-0
by Marty •
Door and shutter assembly ratings it’s not just the door that has to be rated it’s the entire assembly. This video reviews the wall rating and what the assembly rating should be.
Building Code, Door, Exit, Exiting, stair Design
Swinging-Sliding Doors 23-0
by Marty •
Hing swinging doors, sliding doors, overhead garage doors, overhead or sliding security doors/gates. This video covers the exception to where you’re allowed to have a sliding door. All other doors shall be hing swinging or pivot
Building Code, Exit, Fire Hose Connection, Horizontal Exit, StandPipe
Horizontal Exit 22-0
by Marty •
Horizontal exits, this video covers components that are required for a horizontal exit. They are, 1. two-hour rated wall, 2. wall shall go from slab to deck, 3. smoke detector each side, 4. pull station each side, 5. fire hose connection. This one is missed a lot. This is located in the standpipe section for IBC and NFPA 14
ADA, Building Code, Common Path, Door, Exit, Exiting, Fire Protection, Horizontal Exit, occupant Load, Occupant type, stair Design
Panic or Fire Hardware 21-0
by Marty •
Panic or fire hardware, panic hardware at exit doors and/or out of other spaces is what this video covers. Panic hardware is used more times than it is required. It’s probably only required about half the time that I see it used. Only required in H occupancies or A or E spaces or occupancies, Where those occupancies are over 50 persons.
ADA, Building Code, Door, Exiting, Fire Protection
Door Closer 20-0
by Marty •
Automatic door closing device,Door closer, where there required. Any room or space that requires a rating or at one time required a rating and the sprinkler exemption was taken to not have to rate that room. Door closer is still required for that space. Healthcare, since that is my design background, places more door closers than are required by either code in order to help facilitate the facilities of actuation plan.
ARE, Building Code, Door, Exiting, stair Design, Type of Construction
Exit / Exterior Walls 19-0
by Marty •
Ratings of exterior wall where an exit or horizontal exit meets the exterior wall. Picture wall is not required to be rated if the adjoining walls around the exit on the exterior are all 180 degrees or greater. Where the walls are less than 180° you joining walls shall be rated one hour 10 feet beyond the exit walls.
ARE, Building Code, Building Size, Concrete, Fire Protection, Steel, Type of Construction
Type of Construction 16-0
by Marty •
Type of construction table 601 and NFPA 220 both speak to the types of material you’re allowed to use. Both of these tables and sections relate to other sections of the code that speaks to how big or how tall your allowed to build building. For instance code wise you’re not allowed to build a building out of wood if it’s over a certain amount of square footage. Likewise you not allowed to use would be the building of different heights in concealed spaces i.e. your on allowed to build your Interior partition walls of wood on a high-rise. This table does not speak to those locations it only gives you the definition of the building types. Table 503 speaks to hide insights that directly relates to take 601.
Building Code, Door, Exiting, Fire Protection, occupant Load
Door Locations 15-0
by Marty •
I will be updating this video soon, It was just pointed out to me that I say and show “1/2 divided by D” it should be “1/2 * D” for your trying to get 1/2 the distance of D for a not sprinkled building. for a sprinkled it would be 1/3. I will get this corrected soon. This video is on where doors you be located in a room where the occupied requires more than one door. Most occupancies that threshold is 49 people. Once that threshold is met two doors are required and a shout be remotely located from each other. Storage occupancies the threshold is 29, institutional occupancies most are around 10, hazard three people require you to have more than one door but with hazard on doors shall swing in the direction of travel.
ARE, Building Code, Exiting, Fire Protection
Fire Extinguishers Locations 14-0
by Marty •
Fire extinguishers and their locations. The matter how you look at this is going to cost someone money. Fire extinguishers are required to be inspected monthly, documented for both local and federal agencies depending on the type of building our occupancy you have. Healthcare for instance with all the regulations they need to follow, fire extinguishers on average cost $500-$800 per year just for inspections. So an architect or engineer placing too many fire extinguishers in the building can easily cost the owner quite a bit more money. At a facility I reviewed a few years ago we counted between 15 and 25 more fire extinguishers per floor them they needed. They had five floors that is about 125 more fire extinguishers than required assuming the minimum amount of dollars for inspection, $500, this equates to about $62,000 per year for inspections only a fire extinguisher is not required or needed. This is an ongoing cost, so in 10 years this is easily $620,000 that could have been spent better for our healthcare facilities. Take time to analyze every fire extinguisher removed those that are not needed or required. This all needs to be documented with your local AHJ. This can be done at any time you discover you have too many. But the whole floor or area should be analyzed as a whole.
ARE, Building Code, Common Path, Dead End, Deadend, Exiting, occupant Load, stair Design, Travel distance, Travel path
Dead End 13-0
by Marty •
Dead End, this and common path of travel are two of the most confusing topics. People can relate these two topics and think they’re one. They are not they are two separate individual code issues.
Alarm, Building Code, Dead End, Fire Protection, Strobe, Visible Alarm
Fire Alarm Strobe / Visible Alarm 12-0
by Marty •
Fire alarm strobe and placement visual fire alarm based on requirements from both IBC and NFPA, this video can be helpful to fire alarm designers architects for placing artwork and understanding and building officials and fire Marshall’s
ARE, door size, Exiting, occupant Load, stair Design, Travel path
Stair & Stair Door size change 10-0
by Marty •
This video covers how and why stair doors and stairs may change in width. This is additional follow-up on the design of stairs from previous videos. This covers stairs coming from a vertical height also coming from a basement and how the door width will change at the exit landing.
ARE, Common Path, Dead End, Deadend, Exiting, Travel distance, Travel path
Common Path of Travel 8-0
by Marty •
Common path of travel, commonly misunderstood topic. Confused with Deadend Corridor too many times. Most occupancies common at the travel is limited to 75 feet. H occupancy or Hazard occupancies or space travel is 25 feet. Most are allowed to increase if the building is fully sprinkled/fire protected
ARE, door size, Exiting, occupant Load
Exit inches for doors & stairs 7-0
by Marty •
This video focus on calculating exit inches required for doors and stairs. How they differ and how/why they are important to calculate.
I have taught myself something by producing this video. Never could figure out/remember was it .2 or .3 door or .2 or .3 for a stair. While putting this together I realized you come to a door before you come to stair. You come to .2 before you come to .3. —– .2 is for doors .3 is for stairs. I now no longer have to look this up every single time.
ARE, door size, Exiting, occupant Load
Occupant Load 6-0
by Marty •
How many people can fit in a spaceBuilding code understanding/calculation of how to determine how many people allowed to sit. Which then drives how many doors, how big the doors can be. Upcoming videos will cover your location and/or size
Smoke Compartments, Travel distance
Travel distance to smoke compartment 5-0
by Marty •
Travel distance to smoke compartment, is an additional requirement on top of travel distance to an exit. Even standing close to an exit door we still must reach a smoke compartment wall within 200 feet. This requirement is in both IBC and NFPA
Fire Protection, Travel distance
Standpipe locations 4-0
by Marty •
Standpipe’s, should be located within 200 feet of each other. This is easy to achieve mentally and I-2 occupancy, healthcare since travel distance to annex it is also 200 feet and most panpipes are located inside of stairwells. In be occupancy or travel distance is 300 feet to an exit, additional standpipe’s may be required are required so that the standpipe could be reached within 200 feet
Exiting, Exiting, Smoke Compartments, Stairs, Travel path
Smoke compartment exiting 3-0
by Marty •
Exiting out of smoke compartment, if commonly misunderstood. You have to have both exits going directly to the outside, going to two different smoke compartments or a combination thereof.
ARE, Exiting, Exiting, Smoke Compartments, Travel distance
Travel distance to an exit 2-0
by Marty •
Travel distance to an exit, this is dealing with namely travel distance to an exit in healthcare and dealing with smoke compartments.
Exiting, Smoke Compartments, Travel distance
Smoke compartment size 1-0
by Marty •
smoke compartment size, There are several important considerations that need to be thought about. It is not just 22,500sf