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Building Codes

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... fire sprinklers and alarms. Among the specialized codes is the Life Safety Code ... In addition to the IBC we have the International Residential Code ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building Codes


1
Building Codes
  • Violation of building codes and regulations can
    cause injury to building users and expose
    architects to legal liability and the possible
    revocation of their licenses.
  • Governments at all levels establish and enforce
    building codes and regulations to protect the
    public welfare

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3
Enforcement
  • Building codes are most commonly enforced at the
    local level. The central agency is usually the
    building department that reviews drawings, issues
    permits and periodically inspects the project for
    conformance.

4
Jurisdiction
  • A single project may be under the jurisdiction of
    several agencies, health dept, water and sewer,
    DOT, fire department.
  • Problems can arise because of simultaneous and
    independent enforcement of codes, e.g. fire codes.

5
Penalties
  • Stop work order to owner. Architect civil
    liability, possible loss of license.

6
History of Building Codes
7
Code of Hammurabi
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More recently September 11, 2001
11
Model Code Organizations
  • Developed in response to the various, often
    conflicting city codes written from the
    insurance industry point-of view. 3 major
    regional model codes

12
Model Code Organizations
  • Building Officials and Code Administrators
    International (BOCA) BOCA Code North Central
    Northeast States, 1915
  • International Conference of Building Officials
    (ICBO) Uniform Building Code Western States,
    1927
  • Southern Building Code Congress (SCBBI) Standard
    Building Code Southern States, 1940
  • Adoption
  • Est. 13,000 US building codes, adopted at the
    local level

13
1990s began the revolution.
  • the merging of 3 model codes into the
    International Building Code (IBC)
  • Common format of all 3 codes established
  • Allowed for direct comparison of similar design
    situations

14
  • Now we have a single national model code IBC,
    maintained by a group comprised of
    representatives of the 3 model-code agencies
    International Code Congress (ICC)
  • In addition to the IBC we have the International
    Residential Code (IRC) for detached 1 2 family
    dwellings, townhouses less than 3 stories with
    separate means of egress

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16
Federal Requirements (not codes)
  • Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990
    Federal civil rights legislation requiring that
    buildings be made accessible to persons with
    physical and certain defined mental disabilities.
    This is a law not a code. Enforcement is the
    law is through legal actions brought by
    individuals or groups asserting violations of
    their rights of access, as civil rights.

17
Federal Requirements (not codes)
  • Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA) of
    1970 Regulated building design and protects
    workers (protection around openings, sanitation,
    egress, lifts, contaminants, ventilation, noise
    exposure, explosives, etc.

18
State Model Code Adoptions
  • New Jersey adopted IBC in May 2003 revised as
    the NJIBC

19
  • Local Building Codes
  • Many localities adopt the model-code documents
    with little modification, except for the
    administrative chapters that deal with the local
    operations of the building department
  • Larger cities such as Los Angeles, New York,
    Chicago San Francisco adopt more sweeping
    changes to the model-codes or in some cases have
    no basis at all in them.
  • How Do You Know What Code to Follow???
  • Authorities Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) A
    catch-all phrase for all planning, zoning, fire
    and building officials having something to say
    about building in a particular location.
  • The architect must determine exactly which codes
    and standards are to be enforced and by which
    agency get all revisions!!

20
NYC Building Code 2 volumes, currently changing
format to resemble IBC
21
Other Codes
  • Most architectural work is concerned with the
    building code and accessibility requirements,
    however you need to be aware of the existence of
    other codes for such work as electric, plumbing,
    mechanical, fire sprinklers and alarms.
  • Among the specialized codes is the Life Safety
    Code (NFPA-101) published by the National fire
    Protection Association. This code serves as the
    basis for the egress portions of the other model
    codes.

22
Other Codes
  • The NFPA also publishes NFPA-13 which governs the
    installation of fire sprinklers and NFPA-70 which
    is the National Electric Code (NEC).
  • It should be noted that NFPA did not join with
    the other model-code organizations in the
    formation of IBC they are completing the
    development of NFPA 5000 to rival IBC

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  • Standard of Care
  • Codes are legally and ethically considered to be
    minimum criteria that must be met by the
    architect the code is the level that a
    practitioner must never go below.
  • Life Safety vs. Property Protection
  • The basis for building codes development is to
    safeguard the health, safety and welfare of the
    public.
  • There is a strong component of property
    protection in code requirements e.g. sprinklers
    in occupied buildings and unoccupied buildings.
  • Security measures to protect the public may
    become hazards e.g. window bars door hardware
    that can trap inhabitants in an emergency.

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Uniform Construction Code part of the New Jersey
Administrative Code NJ Rehabilitation Subcode
Regulates work on existing buildings
28
Types of Code Approaches Performance vs.
Prescriptive
  • The current IBC, like the previous model codes,
    is prescriptive in nature. It is developed to
    mitigate concerns by creating a specific and
    prescribed responses to problems that have been
    identified. Architects identify the problem,
    such as the width of a corridor, then they look
    up the prescribed response in the applicable code
    section.

29
  • Performance codes define the problem and allow
    the designer to devise the solution. Performance
    codes give the designer more freedom to comply
    with the stated goals. They also require the
    designer to take on more responsibility for
    knowing the consequences of their design actions.

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