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CARLETON HART ARCHITECTURE P . C .
830 sw 10th avenue # 200 portiand oregon 97205
503 243 2252 www carletonhart corn
RECEIVED
APR 08 2019
CITY OF TIGARD
BUILDING DIVISION
project: 17055 Red Rock Creek Commons date: 01.09.19
project address; 11090 SW 68th Parkway, Tigard, OR 97223
by: Anna Galloway
permit number: Permit number/not yet assigned
APPEAL ITEM#1
Code section being appealed: OSSC Section 3004.1 Vents required.
Code Language:
Hoistway of elevators and dumbwaiters with a hoistway height of 25 feet of more, as measured from the bottom
floor landing to the underside of the hoistway ceiling, shall be provided with a means for venting smoke and hot
gases in case of fire.
Proposed Design:
The proposed design eliminates the vents entirely consistent with the 2015 IBC.
Reason for Alternate:
The section on the hoistway has been eliminated from the 2015 IBC. Based on a report from the ICC CTC
Elevator Lobby Study Group (attached)there is a specific concern of smoke movement related to stack effect
when these vents are incorporated in the design.
The building will be fully covered by an approved automatic sprinkler system installed in accordance with Section
903.3.1.1.
Based on the attached ICC CTC study, by eliminating the vents, the stack effect is reduced and smoke movement
is limited throughout the building ultimately improving the overall life safety.
Page 1 of 1
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
CTC
Elevator Lobby Study
Group
10/7/2011
Page 1
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
Report Content
1. Draft Technical Analysis - This includes work done by the risk
assessment Task Group.
2. TG2 Proposals
a. Proposal 1 - Implementation Of Recommendations
b. Proposal 2 - Rational Analysis Complex Buildings
3. TG3 Proposals
a. Proposal 1 — Exit Access Through Enclosed Elevator Lobbies
b. Proposal 2 — Direct Access
c. Proposal 3 — Conflicting Doors And Signage
4. TG4 Proposals
A. Proposal 1 - Lobby Requirements Chapter 30
B. Proposal 2 - Exceptions To Permissions
c. Proposal 3 - Lobby Size Clarification
d. Proposal 4 - Smoke Barrier Continuity
e. Proposal 5 - Area Of Refuge Correlation
f. Proposal 6 - Corridor Smoke And Draft Assembly
Requirements
g. Proposal 7 - Terminology For Elevator Lobbies
h. Proposal 8- Links To 3008 And 3007
i. Proposal 9 Accessible Lobby Size Clarification
5. TG Risk Assessment Proposal
a. Hoistway Venting Option A
b. Hoistway Venting Option B
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
Draft Technical Analysis of the Need for Enclosed Elevator Lobbies
Prepared for the ICC CTC by the Elevator Lobby Study Group
CTC Proposals on Enclosed Lobbies for Elevators
Background
One of the fundamental objectives of fire safety in buildings is to limit the spread of fire
and its effects (heat, smoke, and toxic gasses) to the greatest extent possible. This is
usually accomplished by limiting the ignitability and burning rate of materials by physical
barriers (compartmentation) and by suppression (automatic and/or manual). In specific
areas where it is most critical to prevent direct exposure of building occupants that
might injure or interfere with evacuation, physical barriers may be supplemented by
active or passive smoke control.
The driving force that moves smoke and fire gasses around a building is differences in
temperature (and resulting differences in density) resulting from the fire and from the
fact that the environment in many buildings is heated or cooled for comfort. Air flows
resulting from these temperature differences increase with increasing difference in
temperature and in relation to the area of openings (including visible and hidden gaps
and cracks) between spaces at different temperature.
One of the early lessons learned from fire disasters is the need to protect shafts that can
act as "chimneys," carrying heat, smoke, and gasses to remote areas of a building.
Smoke and fire spread up hoistways and stairways accessed through non-rated doors
had been implicated as early as in 1911 in the 146 fatalities at the Triangle Shirtwaist
Fire [Sunderland 2011]. Other significant fires that involved smoke and fire spread up
stairways and hoistways include the Equitable Building Fire, New York, NY, January 9,
1912; and the MGM Grand Hotel, Las Vegas, NV, November 21, 1980. There are also a
few examples of properly designed and constructed stairways that were compromised
during a fire by doors that were propped open. These include the Prudential Building,
Boston, MA, January 1986, and the Cook County Office Building, Chicago, IL, October 17,
2003.
Sprinklered Buildings
A key observation in each of these major fires is that the buildings (or at least the areas
where the fires occurred) were unsprinklered. The discharge of water from operating
sprinklers not only suppresses or extinguishes the fire, limiting the quantities and
dynamics of the smoke, but also cools the air temperatures to near ambient levels.
Even in the cases of fires shielded from the sprinkler spray, temperatures are low while
smoke and fire gas release rates can be increased due to incomplete combustion. Thus,
in sprinklered buildings, there is little driving force to generate and move dangerous
quantities of smoke and gasses around the building by way of stairways or hoistways.
Sprinkler Reliability
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
The definitive source for data on sprinkler system reliability is Dr. John Hall at NFPA.
According to his latest report [Hall, 2010] on the US experience with sprinklers,
"Sprinklers (of all types) operated in 91% of all reported structure fires large
enough to activate sprinklers, excluding buildings under construction and
buildings without sprinklers in the fire area.* When sprinklers operate, they are
effective 96% of the time, resulting in a combined performance of operating
effectively in 87% of all reported fires where sprinklers were present in the fire
area and fire was large enough to activate them. The combined performance for
the more widely used wet pipe sprinklers is 88%,..."
Across all structures, wet-pipe sprinklers operate 92% of the time. The top reasons for
non-operation are:
• 43% of failures to operate were attributed to the systems being shut off,
• 16% were because manual intervention defeated the equipment,
• 12% were because water was discharged but did not reach the fire,
• 8% were because not enough water was discharged,
• 8% were because of lack of maintenance,
• 6%were because the equipment was inappropriate for the type of fire, and
• 6%were because a component was damaged.
Many of these failure mechanisms identified in the fire records have been mitigated
through recent improvements in building code requirements and the applicable design
standard, NFPA 13, "Standard for the Installation of Sprinkler Systems," effectively
"designing-out" the typical failure mechanisms. "Equipment shut off" typically refers to
water supply valves being closed, either to the entire system or to the portion of the
system in the area of origin. Valves can be electronically monitored (requiring a fire
alarm system) but securing with a chain and lock is common, and permitted by NFPA 13.
"Chain not reinstalled" is a common failure mode, but electronic monitoring cannot be
defeated easily since these systems are required to signal tampering to a constantly-
attended location. The International Building Code (IBC) Section 903.4 requires
electronic monitoring of all valves with a fire alarm control unit that transmits a
distinctive signal to an approved location. Chains and locks permitted to secure valves
by NFPA 13 are not permitted by the IBC. In addition, requirements in the IBC for
automatically transmitting an alarm upon sprinkler system activation to a constantly-
attended location will result in a greater level of reliability than the data set included in
the Hall study.
"Manual intervention" is not a failure of importance because the fire was extinguished
by hose or fire extinguisher and is no longer producing heat, smoke or gas. "Water
discharged but did not reach the fire" is also not significant because the sprinkler spray
cools the environment and, even though smoke and gasses are produced, fires remain
relatively small. The low air temperatures minimize the driving forces that push the fire
products to and up building shafts. "Not enough water discharged" usually refers to
systems that ran out of water too soon, such as when too many sprinklers open. Recent
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
changes in NFPA 13, requiring hydraulically-designed systems and faster-operating
sprinklers have greatly reduced the likelihood of such occurrences when compared to
the universe of sprinkler systems installed over the last one hundred years. In any case,
the effect would be similar to "water discharged but did not reach the fire" because
significant cooling occurs even where it is not sufficient to extinguish the fire.
"Inappropriate for the type of fire" is most common in storage occupancies where the
commodity for which the system was designed was replaced with a commodity that
required a higher water density, and the system was not upgraded. Such failures are
not typical in high-rise residential and office buildings.
Based on this analysis, only "lack of maintenance" and "component damaged" would be
of significance for failure of systems that are electronically monitored, resulting in an
estimated reliability of 98.9%. This reliability rate is also consistent with the reliability
data published by Marryatt for commercial office and residential occupancies in which
he studied electrically-supervised sprinkler systems having flow and tamper signals
automatically transmitted off-site. [Marryatt, 1971] See also the section on
effectiveness of fire safety systems.
Stack Effect
Stack effect is defined as air flow in shafts induced by : ; ct,L op-
indoor-to-outdoor temperature differences that lead to
density differences and flow. By convention, stack effect
flows are upwards when outdoor temperatures are +%
positive
colder than indoors, and reverse stack effect is a - �� g ..- pressure
downward flow observed when outdoor temperatures
Er
are warmer than indoors. The upward flow results when N U --
PLANE
air from lower floors is drawn into the shaft and flows
out on upper floors. Thus, there exists a height in the outdoors: ► i. , -* negative
► (
building at which there is no flow into or out of the shaft, air dry pressure•. _ - -*—
which is called the "neutral plane." Flow rates increase I
with height above and below the neutral plane. This is
illustrated for normal (upward) stack effect in Figure 1. -I-1
�*
Stack effect flows will be induced in any open shaft in a ► -.-
building, including mechanical, plumbing, and electrical Figure 1 -Stack Effect Flows
shafts. Stack effect creates the most problems in
elevator hoistways because these shafts cannot be closed at intervals as can plumbing
and electrical shafts, and the landing doors at every floor at which the elevator stops are
leaky because they open laterally, making them difficult to seal. Problems associated
with stack effect range from annoying (strong flows blowing from openings) to safety
hazards when stack effect moves smoke and gasses from fires or accidental chemical
releases vertically within the building.
Page 5
f' rpA, �b p' � ; SSVe c✓ �
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
The pressure induced at each floor is a function of the leakage 2'8 i i i i f i
areas, the height of the shaft and the temperature difference. — INSIDE-To-ouTswE —
Stack effect pressures across elevator landing doors can range a 2'° — o FFERENCEHE —'
up to 3 in. water (800pa) in an 800 ft building, as shown in — �
Figure 2. [Tamura, G., 1968] Worst case pressures are 2.0 — k
observed in winter conditions since the indoor to outdoor — — t1° —
temperature differences are greatest. z 16— —
w
Because elevator landing doors open laterally, excessive — —
pressure across the door can cause the door to bind and not a +*2 —open or close properly. If a landing door doesn't open, 1' — o4
people cannot get on/off and if it doesn't close fully, the W 0.6
elevator cannot leave the floor. It is reported that in some a —
buildings that experience significant stack effect, elevator Y o-4 —
mechanics must come to the building to adjust landing doors -
at least twice a year.
0 200 400 600 600
In fires, the fire itself can result in shaft flows driven by large HEIGHT of BUILDING. FT
temperature differences between fire gasses and ambient air. Figure 2— Pressures Produced
A paper by Bukowski [Bukowski 2005] based on an analysis by by Stack Effect Across Landing
Klote showed that, in a fully sprinklered building (with Doors
operational sprinklers), fire temperatures are held low enough that significant shaft
flows are never observed and the generation of smoke/toxic gasses that might present a
hazard to occupants is limited because of the greatly reduced burning rates. Since stack
effect is present whether there is a fire or not, shaft flows during fires still occur, but
there is much less smoke/toxic gases if there are operating sprinklers.
Enclosed Elevator Lobbies
Enclosed elevator lobbies are intended to address one or more of the following issues:
1. Protecting hoistways as vertical openings that could spread smoke/toxic gasses
For this to be an issue, one needs to have (smoke) present in sufficient quantities to be
hazardous, and pressure differences to drive it to and up or down the hoistway. Smoke
is only present in a fire. Pressure differences that drive flows can come from fire
temperatures, stack effect, mechanical systems, or elevator piston effect. Sprinklers
maintain fire temperatures at only slightly elevated levels, so there is no significant
driving force. Sprinklered fires produce small quantities of smoke/toxic gasses. [Klote
2004; Klote 1992]
Stack effect derives from building (shaft) height, leakage areas between the shaft and
the inside/outside, and indoor/outdoor temperature differences. Elevator piston effect
is not significant in other than single-car hoistways [Klote and Tamura 1986, Klote 1988].
Absent a fire, stack effect flows can be a nuisance but are rarely a health or safety
hazard. In a fire, it is possible for stack effect forces to carry smoke up or down shafts
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
where elevator hoistways would see the largest flows because landing doors have the
largest leakage areas. However, the quantity of smoke and gas produced in a sprinkler-
controlled fire is small and when distributed into the building volume the concentration,
and thus the potential effect on occupants, is small. Further, in a sprinkler-controlled
fire temperatures are held only slightly above ambient, so the only force available to
move smoke and gas up shafts is stack effect, and stack effect flows are low.
Using the accepted equation from the 2009 ASHRAE Fundamentals Handbook,
estimates of volumetric flows due to stack effect in a 500 ft (152 m) tall hoistway range
from just over 1000 CFM to just over 4000 CFM over a range of outdoor temperatures
between -40 and 40 F (-40 to 4.4 C). Nuisance problems associated with stack effect are
being addressed by designers of very tall buildings by breaking the shafts about every 40
stories, but this is not possible on elevators (especially shuttle and service cars) that
need to serve every floor. A secondary effect of addressing the nuisance problems is
that many shafts are no longer tall enough to yield significant stack effect.
From this it can be concluded that elevator lobbies are not generally necessary to
prevent smoke migration via hoistways in fires for sprinklered buildings except possibly
in very tall buildings with large occupant loads that would require significant time to
evacuate from height.
2. Protecting occupants during a fire (safe place)
Since elevators are not to be used in fires except those designated explicitly for Fire
Service [IBC Section 3007] and Occupant Egress [IBC Section 3008] and both these
sections require lobbies, then lobbies for general use elevators should not be needed to
protect occupants during a fire. Exit stairwells are provided explicitly to provide a
protected means of egress in fires. One conclusion of the refuge area study for GSA
[Klote 1992] was that, in a fully sprinklered building, the entire building is an area of
refuge. With respect to protecting occupants in elevators, ASME A17.1 Firefighter
Emergency Operation (EEO) will take the elevators out of service and return them to the
level of exit discharge before smoke can enter the hoistway, regardless of whether an
enclosed lobby is provided. In 3007- and 3008-type elevators, the required lobbies are
provided to delay recall as long as possible to permit safe use, along with providing a
protected space for occupants to wait or for fire fighters to stage below the fire and to
operate a forward command post.
Hoistway pressurization instead of Lobbies
Elevator lobbies are permitted to be eliminated where additional doors [IBC Section
3002.6] or pressurized hoistways [IBC Section 708.14.2] are provided. Pressures are
required by the IBC to be between 0.10 and 0.25 in. of water, with the lower limit
representing the minimum necessary to prevent flow into the hoistway and the upper
limit representing the value above which the landing doors might jam. In the course of
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
this study, the Group discovered that common practice for mechanical designers is to
utilize unconditioned outside air to pressurize the hoistway and to pressurize stairways.
Filling shafts with air near the outside temperature reduces stack effect since these
flows are driven by differences in temperature between the shaft air and outside air.
According to one mechanical engineer, even where only the stairways are pressurized
with unconditioned air, the temperature in the hoistways will be driven toward the
outside temperature because air moving into the stair will leak into the building and
flow into other shafts, including hoistways
However, the question has been raised as to the effect of outside air of extreme
temperatures (extreme hot or extreme cold) on the safe operation of the elevators,
particularly "machine-room-less" elevators, where elevator machinery is located within
the hoistway. Typically, elevator manufacturers publish temperature limits in their
operating instructions, and 95 F (35 C) non-condensing is a common limit. More study
may be required to determine how long the equipment can be exposed to extreme
temperatures before performance is degraded below safe levels. Note that the IBC
smoke control provisions state that such systems must perform for 20 minutes or 1.5
times the evacuation time, whichever is less. While 1.5 times the evacuation time is
reasonable, the 20 minute maximum may not be appropriate for very tall buildings as
the time to egress even with elevators may be much longer (depending on the number
of floors evacuating or relocating). Occupant self-evacuation elevator systems utilizing
all public-use cars (as required in IBC Section 3008) are capable of evacuating 100% of
the occupants of any building in 1 hour or less [Bukowski 2008]. Also, the 20 minute
maximum would certainly not be appropriate for Fire Service Access Elevators which are
intended to be operational for the duration of a fire not just during building evacuation.
Standby power is required to be available for both types of elevators for two hours
which may indicate the intended duration of operation.
Smoke Control Systems Design
In any building, there exist complex flow paths that include construction cracks and
hidden spaces not normally apparent. The larger the building, the more complex these
flow paths can become. In addition, there can be strong interaction between stair and
hoistway pressurization systems in buildings that have both [Miller 2008].
Section 909.4 of the IBC requires a rational analysis to be performed and submitted with
the construction documents, accounting for a number of factors including stack effect,
fire temperatures, wind, HVAC, climate and duration of operation. The scope of the
required analysis for many buildings results in a complexity that can only adequately be
addressed through the utilization of computer (network) models such as CONTAM,
developed and distributed by NIST [NIST 2011].
Due to the existence of multiple, complex flow paths, all of which interact in complex
ways, and especially where some are mechanically pressurized, it is crucial that the
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
required rational analysis utilize network models for high-rise buildings that have one or
more of the following characteristics:
• Buildings in which there is more than a 40% difference in floor area between any
two floors,
• Buildings that contain a parking garage, whether open or enclosed,
• Buildings that contain both pressurized stairways and pressurized hoistways,
• Buildings that contain stacked atria,
• Buildings containing atria with mechanical smoke control, and
• Buildings containing shafts taller than 420 feet
Stairway Pressurization
Stairway pressurization generally is outside the scope of this Study Group but there are
many elements of stairway pressurization systems that impact how the elevator
hoistways will perform during a fire. One of the most important issues is how stair
pressurization affects the performance of the hoistway when the option of pressurizing
the hoistway is chosen.
Effectiveness of Fire Safety Systems
This section serves the purpose of bringing the technical analysis together with a more
thorough review of how the features of the building whether passive or active, work
together to manage the fire and protect building occupants. This is demonstrated
through the use of the Fire Safety Concepts Tree (NFPA 550).
Code intent and strategy
The intent of Section 713.14.1 for requiring an elevator lobby enclosure is to protect the
elevator shaft from smoke infiltration and possible smoke spread onto other (non-fire)
floors. ICC's International Building Code 2012 edition requires various fire safety
systems and features based upon a building's use and occupancy, height and area, and
construction type. These features are part of an overall strategy to protect the building
occupants and emergency responders from fire. Primary fire safety systems and
features are:
• Automatic fire sprinkler system
• Automatic and manual fire detection and alarm system
• Maximum travel distance to an exit
• Egress/exit shaft enclosure
• HVAC system controls
• Elevator lobby shaft enclosure
• Elevator shaft venting
Fire Safety Concepts Tree Analysis
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
The effectiveness and interaction of these systems and features to achieve fire safety is
easiest described by NFPA 550 Guide to the Fire Safety Concepts Tree (the "Tree") 2007
edition (Appendix A). Rather than considering each fire safety system and features
separately, the Tree provides a "systems approach" to fire safety, examines all fire
safety systems holistically to determine how they influence the achievement of fire
safety goals and objectives. The Tree uses logic gates to show a hierarchical relationship
of fire safety concepts. There are two types of logic gates in the Tree: "or" gates and
"and" gates. An "or" gate, represented by a circle with a plus sign in it, indicates that
any of the concepts below it will cause or have as an outcome based on the concept
above it. An "and" gate is represented by a circle with a dot in the middle. This
indicates that all of the concepts below the "and" gate are needed to achieve the
concept above the gate. The Tree can also identify gaps and areas of redundancy in fire
protection strategies.
Again, Section 713.14.1 is intended to limit smoke exposure to occupants on non-fire
floors, Figure 1 illustrates the top tier gates of the Tree to accomplish the objective. The
building code assumes the fire occurs, thus, the objective is to "manage fire impact" by
"manage the fire" or "manage exposed."
Fire Safety Objectives
(Limit smoke exposure to
occupants on non-fire floor)
C)
Prevent fire Manage fire
ignition Impact
0
Manage fire Manage exposed(Limit
(Control smoke smoke exposure on non-
production,migration) fire floors)
Figure 1: Top-gates of the Tree annotated with the intent of IBC Section 713.14.1
Figure 2 illustrates the two or three possible options to achieve "manage fire."
Suppressing the fire by an automatic fire suppression system installed in accordance
with IBC Chapter 9 or controlling fire (vertical migration) by construction features in
accordance with IBC Sections 713 (shafts), 711 (horizontal assemblies), 716 (opening
protectives) or venting fire/smoke that infiltrates into the elevator shaft in accordance
with Section 3004 are each ways to limit the smoke exposure to occupants on non-fire
floors. Controlling the combustion process, while identified as an option that can be
used in general and used to a limited extent by the IBC's requirements for interior finish,
is not practical or sufficient to solely achieve the objective in a commercial building.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
Manage fire
(Control smoke
production,migration)
0
Control Suppress fire Control fire by
combustion (IBC Chapter 9) construction
process (IBC Chapter 7)
0
Control Provide
movement of fire structural
stability
e
Confine/contain Vent fire
fire(IBC§708, (IBC§3004)
e 712, 715)
Automatically Manually
suppress fire suppress fire
(IBC Section
Figure 2: IBC 2012 required features and systems that contribute to limiting smoke
production and migration to non-fire floors.
Figure 3 illustrates the options to achieve "manage exposed." "Safeguard exposed" is
accomplished by "defend-in-place" and "move exposed." IBC Chapter 9 and Section
403.3 and 403.4 require various fire safety systems to detect and alert the building
occupants of a fire condition to initiate evacuation. The provisions of IBC Chapter 10
and Section 403.5 both require various fire safety features and systems to protect the
building occupants during egress or evacuation, thus limiting smoke exposure to
occupants on non-fire floors. Section 403.2.3 requires egress stair and elevator
hoistway enclosures in Risk Categories III and IV high rise buildings (Table 1604.5), and
all buildings over 420 ft in height to exhibit impact resistance that resists the passage of
fire and smoke into the shafts, minimizing the potential for inadvertent compromise of
the enclosure .
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
Manage exposed(Limit
smoke exposure on non-
fire floors)
El)
Limit amount Safeguard
exposed exposed
Defend-in-place Move exposed
(IBC§403.4, (IBC§403.5,
§907.5.2.2) Chapters 9-10)
Initiate occupant Limit travel Protect in exit
evacuation distance to exit enclosure
(IBC§907,908)) (IBC§1016) (IBC§1022)
Figure 3: IBC 2012 required features and systems that limit smoke exposure
to occupants on non-fire floors.
Fire Suppression Systems Availability
To address the automatic fire suppression (automatic sprinkler) system reliability, it is
possible to use the Tree to show the primary system components, features and
safeguards required by the IBC to ensure availability of suppression operation. The Tree
can identify "single point failure" elements that could result in an unacceptable
outcome in the event of a fire. This approach can be used in lieu of a quantitative risk
analysis which requires system performance data, event tree and fault tree analysis, as
well as occupant exposure analysis (an Available Safe Egress Time vs. Required Safe
Egress Time comparative analysis). This could be a line diagram of an IBC-required
sprinkler system in a high-rise building including the system components analysis as
follows:
• A single sprinkler fails to open:
o NFPA 13 requires multiple sprinklers be included in the hydraulically most
remote area to flow in the fire sprinkler design calculation, resulting in
fire control vs. fire extinguishment which significantly reduces smoke
production versus no sprinkler activation condition.
• Sprinkler system floor control valve is closed/no water available:
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
o This is historically the single-highest cause for sprinkler system failure.
IBC Section 903.4 requires electronic supervision of water supply,
monitored both on-site and off-site for increased reliability/availability.
o Section 403.3.1 requires buildings over 420 feet to have two risers
located in remote exit enclosures with each riser feeding the sprinklers
on alternate floors, providing redundant supplies.
o The sprinkler systems must be arranged such that a single point of failure
of the supply could at most result in failure of the sprinklers on one floor
with those on the floors above and below still functional.
• Sprinkler/standpipe riser is out-of-service:
o IBC Section 905.2 requires all sprinkler/standpipe risers be
interconnected at the base, providing redundancy and greatly eliminating
the potential of a loss of sprinkler/standpipe riser.
• Automatic fire pump fails to operate:
o Pump failure: jockey pump operates, sufficient water supply for one- to
two-sprinklers and building fire alarm notification. For buildings less than
420 ft. in height above fire department connection, fire department
pumper is capable of supporting fire flow demand for sprinkler and
standpipe systems.
o Pump failure due to no utility power supply: IBC Section 403.4.8 requires
emergency power system for redundancy.
• No water in city/municipal water main or valve closed at connection to
city/municipal water supply
o IBC Section 403.3.2 requires a connection to a minimum of two city water
mains, minimizing the potential for loss of municipal water supply.
Reliability of Other Systems
Fire sprinkler systems are not the only fire protection features within a building. Most
buildings have combinations of other types of fire protection features that include fire
and/or smoke related walls, floor/ceiling assemblies, egress systems, detection systems,
alarm systems, smoke control systems, and other mechanisms for protecting people
from fire and the products of combustion. The discussion above regarding sprinkler
system reliability is just an example of how a risk analysis might be approached. Similar
types of analyses with potential failure modes for each of these other systems in a
building would need to be performed for the other fire protection features in order for a
risk analysis to be complete. Such a risk analysis could be performed using the same
methodology as that used for the sprinkler system reliability discussion.
Recommendations for IBC Regarding Elevator Lobbies
Based on the forgoing, the following recommendations are suggested for consideration
by the CTC:
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
1. Unsprinklered low- and mid-rise buildings (buildings with an occupied floor less
than 55 feet above the lowest level fire department vehicle access or less than
75 feet above the lowest level of fire department access with an occupant load
less than 30 on each floor)
• No enclosed elevator lobbies required for traditional elevators.
• Rationale: While fire temperatures can be high, driving smoke and gasses
around the building, occupants traveling at the typical rate of about 150
ft/min over the maximum permitted travel distance of 200 ft can reach
the safety of an egress stairway in about 1.3 minutes and can descend to
the level of exit discharge in less than five minutes. This is merely an
approximation but provides an indication of the amount of time necessary
for egress in low and mid rise buildings. Also, some code officials
participating in the study group stated that lobbies have traditionally not
been required in these type buildings in their jurisdictions and their
experience has been good.
• Sprinklers are required in any building containing Fire service access (IBC
Section 3007) and occupant evacuation (IBC Section 3008) elevators so
these would not be found in buildings in this category.
2. Sprinklered buildings with occupied floors less than 75 feet to the lowest level of
fire department vehicle access :
• No enclosed elevator lobbies required for traditional elevators
o Rationale: In sprinklered buildings fire temperatures are kept low
and such buildings have little stack effect. Traditional elevators
are not to be used by occupants in fires, so any small infiltration
into the hoistway is not significant. Shafts shorter than 75 feet
have limited stack effect flows.
• Enclosed lobbies required for fire service access (IBC Section 3007) and
occupant evacuation (IBC Section 3008) elevators
o Rationale: Fire service access and occupant egress elevators need
to continue in operation during a fire. Lobbies provide a protected
space to stage and to await the elevator and further provide a
physical barrier to smoke that might activate a lobby smoke
detector and trigger Phase I recall.
3. Sprinklered buildings with an occupied floor more than 75 feet to the lowest
level of fire department vehicle access but less than 420 feet in building height
• No enclosed elevator lobbies required for traditional elevators.
o Rationale: In sprinklered buildings fire temperatures are kept low
and such buildings have little stack effect. Traditional elevators
are not to be used by occupants in fires, so any small infiltration
into the hoistway is not significant.
• Enclosed elevator lobbies required for fire service access (IBC Section
3007) and occupant evacuation (IBC Section 3008) elevators
o Rationale: Fire service access and occupant egress elevators need
to continue in operation during a fire. Lobbies provide a protected
space to stage and to await the elevator and further provide a
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
physical barrier to smoke that might activate a lobby smoke
detector and trigger Phase I recall.
4. Sprinklered buildings more than 420 feet in building height
• Enclosed elevator lobbies or pressurization of the hoistways required for
traditional elevators.
o Rationale: While traditional elevators are not permitted to be used
in fires, the shaft height might result in more inadvertent smoke
infiltration due to stack effect and spread to remote areas.
Enclosed lobbies with smoke tight construction or pressurization of
the hoistways will limit infiltration. Further consideration and
discussion is needed regarding the threshold of 420 feet.
• Enclosed elevator lobbies required for fire service access (IBC Section
3007) and occupant evacuation (IBC Section 3008) elevators
o Rationale: Fire service access and occupant egress elevators need
to continue in operation during a fire. Lobbies provide a protected
space to stage and to await the elevator and further provide a
physical barrier to smoke that might activate a lobby smoke
detector and trigger Phase I recall.
• EXCEPTION: Hoistways for traditional elevators separated into vertical
sections not exceeding 420 feet in height with no communication of the
shaft environment between sections shall not require enclosed lobbies or
pressurization as long as the following condition is met.
o Where connection of elevator banks is by a transfer corridor, it
shall be necessary to pass through at least 2 swinging doors or a
revolving door that maintains a separation of the environments to
pass from one section to another.
o Rationale: By breaking shafts into shorter sections and limiting
communication of different shaft environments, both stack effect
and smoke migration will be limited to the extent that
pressurization of the hoistways is not required.
5. The design of pressurization systems for elevator hoistways shall be based on a
rational analysis in accordance with Section 909.4 that utilizes a network model
approved by the AHJ and which includes an analysis of possible interactions
between building shafts pressurized by different systems, and between
pressurized and unpressurized shafts that exceed 420 feet in height. Add
guidance to commentary for 909.4 that the rational analysis should show that
the pressurization design will maintain the estimated Fractional Effective Dose
(FED) below 0.5 and the estimated visibility distance above 25 feet within the
stairway for 1.5 times the estimated evacuation time for each of the design fires
selected.
o Rationale: Taller buildings with more complex flow paths require
analysis utilizing a network model that can account for these
interacting flow paths. The criteria suggested for commentary
represents the standard of practice for a fire hazard analysis
preformed as the required rational analysis.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
References
ASHRAE Handbook– Fundamentals, Ch 24, Owen, M. ed., ASHRAE, 2009.
Bukowski, R.W., Is There a Need to Enclose Elevator Lobbies in Tall Buildings?, Building
Safety Journal, Vol 3, No 4, 26-31, August 2005.
Bukowski, R.W., Status of the Use of Elevators in Fires, Emerging Trends (online), SFPE,
Bethesda, MD, 2008.
Hall, J. R., U.S. EXPERIENCE WITH SPRINKLERS AND OTHER
AUTOMATIC FIRE EXTINGUISHING EQUIPMENT, NFPA, Quincy, MA 2010.
Klote,J.H., Hazards Due to Smoke Migration Through Elevator Shafts–Volume I:
Analysis and Discussion. Final Report, NIST GCR 04-864-1, Gaithersburg, MD, , 2004.
Klote,J.H., Nelson, H.E. and Deal, S., Staging Areas for Persons with Mobility Limitations,
NISTIR 4770, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD 1992.
Klote,J.H. and Tamura, G.T., "Elevator Piston Effect and the Smoke Problem," Fire Safety
Journal, Vol. 11, No. 3, pp. 227-233, December 1986.
Klote,J.H., An Analysis of the Influence of Piston Effect on Elevator Smoke Control,
NISTIR 88-3751, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD 1988.
Marryatt, H.W., Fire, Automatic Sprinkler Performance in Australia and New Zealand,
1886-1968, Australian Fire Protection Association (Melbourne), ISBN 0959946101, 1971.
Miller, R.S. and Beasley, D., On Elevator Shaft Pressurization for Smoke Control in Tall
Buildings, in Proc Society of Fire Protection Engineers Professional Development
Conference and Exposition (2008), Charlotte, North Carolina.
NIST CONTAM homepage http://www.bfrl.nist.gov/IAQanalysis/CONTAM/index.htm
Sutherland, S., What's changed — and what hasn't — in the 100 years since the Triangle
Waist Co. fire, NFPA Journal, NFPA Quincy, MA 02269, March/April 2011
Tamura, G., Stack Effect and Building Design, NRCC CBD-107, Ottawa, Canada, 1968.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
TG2 PROPOSALS
PROPOSAL 1
IMPLEMENTATION OF RECOMMENDATIONS
713.14.1 General. Enclosed elevator lobbies in accordance with Section 713.14.2 shall
be required in buildings more than 420 feet in height.
Exception: Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where all the following are met:
1. Elevator group hoistways do not exceed 420 feet in height from the bottom of
the elevator pit to the top of the hoistway.
2. There is no communication of the shaft environment between elevator groups.
3. On other than the level of exit discharge, where two or more elevator groups
open on to a common floor, they shall be separated by at least 2 sets of doors or
a revolving door that maintains a separation of the environments.
713.14.21 Elevator lobby requirements. Where an enclosed elevator lobby is required
they shall be provided at each floor hoistway entrance where an elevator shaft
enclosure connects more than three stories. The lobby enclosure shall separate the
elevator shaft enclosure doors from each floor by fire partitions. In addition to the
requirements in Section 708 for fire partitions, doors protecting openings in the elevator
lobby enclosure walls shall also comply with Section 716.5.3 as required for corridor
walls and penetrations of the elevator lobby enclosure by air ducts and transfer
openings hall be protected as required for corridors in accordance with Section
717.5.4.1. Elevator lobbies shall have at least one means of egress complying with
Chapter 10 and other provisions within this code.
Exceptions:
1. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required at the level(s) of exit discharge, provided
the level(s) of exit discharge is equipped with an automatic sprinkler system in
accordance with Section 903.3.1.1.
2. Elevators not required to be located in a shaft in accordance with Section 712 are not
required to have enclosed elevator lobbies.
3. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where additional doors are provided at
the hoistway opening in accordance with Section 3002.6. Such doors shall comply with
the smoke and draft control door assembly requirements in Section 716.5.3.1 when
tested in accordance with UL 1784 without an artificial bottom seal.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
�. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the building is protected by an
automatic sprinkler system installed in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2.
This exception shall not apply to the following:
4.1 Group 12 occupancies;
4.2 Group 13 occupancies, and
\4.3 Elevators serving floor levels over 75 feet (22 860 mm) above the lowest
level of fire department vehicle access in high rise buildings.
§4. Smoke partitions shall be permitted in lieu of fire partitions to separate the elevator
lobby at each floor where the building is equipped throughout with an automatic
sprinkler system installed in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1. or 903.3.1.2. In addition
to the requirements in Section 710 for smoke partitions, doors protecting openings in
the smoke partitions shall also comply with Sections 710.5.2.2, 710.5.2.3, and 716.5.9
and duct penetrations of the smoke partitions shall be protected as required for
corridors in accordance with Section 717.5.4.1.
5. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the elevator hoistway is
pressurized in accordance with Section 909.21.
6. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the elevator serves only open
parking garages in accordance with Section 406.5.
713.14.1.1 Area of refuge. Areas of refuge shall be provided as required by Section
1007.
Reason: This proposal is a technical shift away from what has been termed by the CTC
study group "traditional elevator lobbies" as opposed to Fire Service Access Elevators
and Occupant evacuation elevators. This shift is based upon background data and a
technical analysis produced by the Study Group on Elevator lobbies for the CTC. More
specifically this study can be reviewed at the following link.
This study reveals based upon sprinkler performance and stack effect that the hazards
of floor to floor movement of smoke are minimal until the shafts (hoistways) start
becoming very tall. The study looks at sprinkler reliability to better establish that the
sprinklers will operate as intended. The recommendations of the study group were
used to draft the proposal. The recommendations are as follows:
1. Unsprinklered low- and mid-rise buildings (buildings with an occupied floor less
than 55 feet above the lowest level fire department vehicle access or less than
75 feet above the lowest level of fire department access with an occupant load
less than 30 on each floor)
• No enclosed elevator lobbies required for traditional elevators.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
• Rationale: While fire temperatures can be high, driving smoke and gasses
around the building, occupants traveling at the typical rate of about 150
ft/min over the maximum permitted travel distance of 200 ft can reach
the safety of an egress stairway in about 1.3 minutes and can descend to
the level of exit discharge in less than five minutes. This is merely an
approximation but provides an indication of the amount of time necessary
for egress in low and mid rise buildings.
• Sprinklers are required in any building containing Fire service access
(3007) and occupant evacuation (3008) elevators so these would not be
found in buildings in this category.
2. Sprinklered buildings with occupied floors less than 75 feet to the lowest level of
fire department vehicle access :
• No enclosed elevator lobbies required for traditional elevators
o Rationale: In sprinklered buildings fire temperatures are kept low
and such buildings have little stack effect. Traditional elevators
are not to be used by occupants in fires, so any small infiltration
into the hoistway is not significant. Shafts shorter than 75 feet
have limited stack effect flows.
• Enclosed lobbies required for fire service access (3007) and occupant
evacuation (3008) elevators
o Rationale: Fire service access and occupant egress elevators need
to continue in operation during a fire. Lobbies provide a protected
space to stage and to await the elevator and further provide a
physical barrier to smoke that might activate a lobby smoke
detector and trigger Phase I recall.
3. Sprinklered buildings with an occupied floor more than 75 feet to the lowest
level of fire department vehicle access but less than 420 feet in building height
a. No enclosed elevator lobbies required for traditional elevators.
i. Rationale: In sprinklered buildings fire temperatures are kept low
and such buildings have little stack effect. Traditional elevators
are not to be used by occupants in fires, so any small infiltration
into the hoistway is not significant.
b. Enclosed elevator lobbies required for fire service access (3007) and
occupant evacuation (3008) elevators
i. Rationale: Fire service access and occupant egress elevators need
to continue in operation during a fire. Lobbies provide a protected
space to stage and to await the elevator and further provide a
physical barrier to smoke that might activate a lobby smoke
detector and trigger Phase I recall.
4. Sprinklered buildings more than 420 feet in building height
a. Enclosed elevator lobbies or pressurization of the hoistways required for
traditional elevators.
i. Rationale: While traditional elevators are not permitted to be used
in fires, the shaft height might result in more inadvertent smoke
infiltration due to stack effect and spread to remote areas.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
Enclosed lobbies with smoke tight construction or pressurization of
the hoistways will limit infiltration. The threshold of 420 feet has
been heavily debated and is a difficult issue. The reason this study
group chose this number relates indirectly to this issue but
indicates a higher level of risk to occupants. More specifically this
is the height where it becomes difficult to pump water from the
ground (fire department) for standpipes and sprinklers. This
therefore is where reliability of water supply becomes more of a
concern which can possibly relate to sprinkler performance. Also
since it is consistent with additional criteria in the code seemed a
reasonable point to transition to more restrictive requirements to
compensate for the possible increase in risk level to occupants
(egress time) and the possibility for an increase in smoke
production and stack effect due to height.
b. Enclosed elevator lobbies required for fire service access (3007) and
occupant evacuation (3008) elevators
i. Rationale: Fire service access and occupant egress elevators need
to continue in operation during a fire. Lobbies provide a protected
space to stage and to await the elevator and further provide a
physical barrier to smoke that might activate a lobby smoke
detector and trigger Phase I recall.
c. EXCEPTION: Hoistways for traditional elevators separated into vertical
sections not exceeding 420 feet in height with no communication of the
shaft environment between sections shall not require enclosed lobbies or
pressurization as long as the following condition is met.
i. Where connection of elevator banks is by a transfer corridor, it
shall be necessary to pass through at least 2 swinging doors or a
revolving door that maintains a separation of the environments to
pass from one section to another.
ii. Rationale: By breaking shafts into shorter sections and limiting
communication of different shaft environments, both stack effect
and smoke migration will be limited to the extent that
pressurization of the hoistways is not required.
It is important to note that these recommendations address fire service access elevators
as well as occupant evacuation elevators but such elevators are not applicable to
Section 713.14. In fact the recommendation of the analysis for those types of elevators
was to keep the lobbies as they provide a multitude of functions that differ from
traditional elevator lobbies. Additionally it should be noted that although enclosed
elevator lobbies have been eliminated in many buildings for "traditional" elevators any
building containing occupied floors more than 120 feet from the lowest level of fire
department access will be required to have fire service access elevators. Such elevators
are required to have a lobby with several integral features. If the elevators of choice are
passenger elevators in the building an elevator lobby would be required of more
substantial construction as compared to what is required in Section 713.14.1. This same
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
logic would apply in buildings that allow the use of elevators for evacuation in
accordance with Section 3008. In that case lobbies would be required for the entire
building regardless of building height.
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PROPOSAL 2
RATIONAL ANALYSIS COMPLEX BUILDINGS
909.4 Analysis. A rational analysis supporting the types of smoke control systems to be
employed, their methods of operation, the systems supporting them and the methods
of construction to be utilized shall accompany the submitted construction documents
and shall include, but not be limited to, the items indicated in Sections 909.4.1 through
909.4.6. [F]
909.4.1 Stack effect. The system shall be designed such that the maximum probable
normal or reverse stack effect will not adversely interfere with the system's capabilities.
In determining the maximum probable stack effect, altitude, elevation, weather history
and interior temperatures shall be used. [F]
909.4.2 Temperature effect of fire. Buoyancy and expansion caused by the design fire in
accordance with Section 909.9 shall be analyzed. The system shall be designed such that
these effects do not adversely interfere with the system's capabilities. [F]
909.4.3 Wind effect.The design shall consider the adverse effects of wind. Such
consideration shall be consistent with the wind-loading provisions of Chapter 16. [F]
909.4.4 HVAC systems.The design shall consider the effects of the heating, ventilating
and air-conditioning (HVAC) systems on both smoke and fire transport. The analysis
shall include all permutations of systems status. The design shall consider the effects of
the fire on the HVAC systems. [F]
909.4.5 Climate.The design shall consider the effects of low temperatures on systems,
property and occupants. Air inlets and exhausts shall be located so as to prevent snow
or ice blockage. [F]
909.4.6 Duration of operation. All portions of active or passive smoke control systems
shall be capable of continued operation after detection of the fire event for a period of
not less than either 20 minutes or 1.5 times the calculated egress time, whichever is
less. [F]
909.4.7 Complex buildings. For complex buildings the rational analysis required by
909.4 shall utilize an approved computer model that is capable of taking into account
the complexity of the building arrangement and the interactions of different
pressurization systems.
909.4.7.1 Complex buildings shall be designated by the code official and include but are
not limited to-buildings with any of the following characteristics:
1. Highrise buildings in which there is more than a 40% difference in floor area between
any two floors,
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2. Highrise buildings that contain a parking garage, whether open or enclosed,
3. Highrise buildings that contain both pressurized stairways and pressurized hoistways,
4. Highrise buildings that contain stacked atria.
5. Highrise buildings containing atria with mechanical smoke control
909.4.7.2 Duration of Operation In a complex building all portions of active or passive
smoke control systems shall be capable of continued operation after detection of the
fire event for a period of not less than either 60 minutes or 1.5 times the calculated
egress time, whichever is less. [Fl
Reason: Task Group 2 of the CTC Elevator Lobby group studied the need for elevator
lobbies for traditional elevators (Section 713.14.1), FSAE (3007) and Occupant
Evacuation elevators(3008). This group conducted a technical analysis that concluded
with several recommendations for the need for such lobbies and in addition provided a
recommendation on the need for more close analysis of buildings with more extreme
complexity. The analysis can be found at the following link:
In fact in many cases a traditional elevator lobby was determined to be unnecessary but
for unusual building configurations there was more of a concern for interaction of
systems and the negative impact of stack effect. For instance, dramatic reductions in
the footprint of a building can alter the flows within a building. Below is
recommendation 5 from the technical analysis.
5. The design of pressurization systems for elevator hoistways shall be based on a
rational analysis in accordance with Section 909.4 that utilizes a network model
approved by the AHJ and which includes an analysis of possible interactions
between building shafts pressurized by different systems, and between
pressurized and unpressurized shafts that exceed 420 feet in height. Add
guidance to commentary for 909.4 that the rational analysis should show that
the pressurization design will maintain the estimated Fractional Effective Dose
(FED) below 0.5 and the estimated visibility distance above 25 feet within the
stairway for 1.5 times the estimated evacuation time for each of the design fires
selected.
iii. Rationale: Taller buildings with more complex flow paths require
analysis utilizing a network model that can account for these
interacting flow paths. The criteria suggested for commentary
represents the standard of practice for a fire hazard analysis
preformed as the required rational analysis.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
TG3 PROPOSALS
PROPOSAL 1
EXIT ACCESS THROUGH ENCLOSED ELEVATOR LOBBIES
Revise as follows:
713.14.1 Elevator lobby. An enclosed elevator lobby shall be provided at each floor
where an elevator shaft enclosure connects more than three stories. The lobby
enclosure shall separate the elevator shaft enclosure doors from each floor by fire
partitions. In addition to the requirements in Section 708 for fire partitions, doors
protecting openings in the elevator lobby enclosure walls shall also comply with Section
716.5.3 as required for corridor walls and penetrations of the elevator lobby enclosure
by ducts and air transfer openings shall be protected as required for corridors in
accordance with Section 717.5.4.1. Elevator lobbies shall have at least one means of
egress complying with Chapter 10 and other provisions within this code. Egress through
an elevator lobby shall be permitted in accordance with Section 1014.2 item 5
3007.7 Fire service access elevator lobby.The fire service access elevator shall open
into a fire service access elevator lobby in accordance with Sections 3007.7.1 through
3007.7.5. Egress is permitted through the elevator lobby in accordance with Section
1014.2 item 5.
Exception: Where a fire service access elevator has two entrances onto a floor, the
second entrance shall be permitted to open into an elevator lobby in accordance with
Section 708.14.1.
3008.7 Occupant evacuation elevator lobby. The occupant evacuation elevators shall
open into an elevator lobby in accordance with Sections 3008.7.1 through 3008.7.7.
Egress is permitted through the elevator lobby in accordance with Section 1014.2 item
5.
Add a new item 5 to section 1014.2
5. Exit access through an enclosed elevator lobby, -- - - - - - e e , is
permitted. Access to at least one of the required exits shall be accomplished without
travel through the enclosed elevator lobbies required by Section 713.14.1 and Section
3008.
Access through fire service access elevator lobbies is not restricted.
Where the path of exit access travel passes through an enclosed elevator lobby the level
of protection required for the enclosed elevator lobby is not required to be extended to
the exit unless direct access to an exit is required by other sections of this code.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
1018.6 Corridor continuity. Fire-resistance-rated corridors shall be continuous from the
point of entry to an exit, and shall not be interrupted by intervening rooms. Where the
path of egress travel within a fire-resistance-rated corridor to the exit includes travel
along unenclosed exit access stairways or ramps, the fire resistance-rating shall be
continuous for the length of the stairway or ramp and for the length of the connecting
corridor on the adjacent floor leading to the exit.
Exceptions:
1. Foyers, lobbies or reception rooms constructed as required for corridors shall not be
construed as
Intervening rooms.
2. Enclosed elevator lobbies as permitted by Section 1014.2 item 5 shall not be
construed as intervening rooms.
Reason: First the purpose of elevator lobbies is first discussed. The code itself does not
state what the purpose of a traditional elevator lobby is but historically and to a certain
extent from the code commentary there are several purposes that could be concluded.
• Prevent smoke from spreading from the floor of fire origin through the elevator
hoistway.
• Protect occupied areas from smoke spread from the elevator hoistway
In the case of FSAEs and Occupant Evacuation elevators there are additional purposes
such as providing a staging area for fire fighters, a protected area for occupants awaiting
egress and also to delay the automatic activation of phase 1 recall. Note that Both
FSAE and Occupant evacuation elevators require direct access to an exit within the
lobby.
Based upon the intent of the code it was felt that exit access through elevator lobbies
should be limited only for occupant evacuation elevators and traditional elevators.
Occupant evacuation elevators are specifically drawing occupants to the lobby. It would
not be appropriate to allow a tenant space with all egress paths having to go through
the enclosed lobby to get to a stair since they will be working against the traffic flow of
egress. Traditional enclosed elevator lobbies if required are required with a concern for
smoke migration in the elevator hoistway. Therefore it would not be prudent to allow
both paths of egress to pass through the enclosed lobby.
The last sentence of the proposed item 5 also clarifies that if an egress path passes
through a lobby with more restrictive construction that the level of construction does
not need to be continued to the exit.
The new exception to Section 1018.1 clarifies also that travel is permitted through an
enclosed elevator lobby if the enclosed elevator lobby is located in a rated corridor.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 2
DIRECT ACCESS
Revise as follows:
3007.7.1 Interior exit stairway access.The fire service access elevator lobby shall have
direct access from the enclosed elevator lobby to an enclosure for an interior exit
stairway.
Exception: Access to an interior exit stairway shall be permitted to be through a
protected path of travel that has a level of fire protection not less than the elevator
lobby enclosure. The protected path shall be separated from the enclosed elevator
lobby through an opening protected by a smoke and draft control assembly in
accordance Section 716.5.3.
3008.7.1 Interior exit stairway access.The occupant evacuation elevator lobby shall
have direct access from the enclosed elevator lobby to an interior exit stairway or ramp.
Exception: Access to an interior exit stairway shall be permitted to be through a
protected path of travel that has a level of fire protection not less than the elevator
lobby enclosure. The protected path shall be separated from the enclosed elevator
lobby through an opening protected by a smoke and draft control assembly in
accordance Section 716.5.3.
505.2.3 Openness. A mezzanine shall be open and unobstructed to the room in which
such mezzanine is located except for walls not more than 42 inches (1067 mm) in height,
columns and posts.
Exceptions:
1. Mezzanines or portions thereof are not required to be open to the room in which the
mezzanines are located, provided that the occupant load of the aggregate area of the
enclosed space is not greater than 10.
2. A mezzanine having two or more means of egress is not required to be open to the
room in which the mezzanine is located if at least one of the means of egress provides
direct access directly to an exit from the mezzanine level.
3. ...
1027.1 General. Exits shall discharge directly to the exterior of the building. The exit
discharge shall be at grade or shall provide direct access directly to grade. The exit
discharge shall not reenter a building. The combined use of Exceptions 1 and 2 shall not
exceed 50 percent of the number and capacity of the required exits.
Direct Access. A path of travel from a space to an immediately adjacent space through
an opening in the common wall between the two spaces.
Reason: Both FSAE and Occupant Evacuation elevators lobbies call for direct access to
the stairway. The term direct access is not necessarily clear in its meaning and could if
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
applied as intended place severe design limitations on some buildings. The intent of this
proposal is to set out a viable option for the stairs to be more remotely located from the
lobby. A package of requirements that provides fire resistance rated construction and
smoke and draft protection is provided. A definition is also provided for to clarify the
use of the term. In some cases text had to be revised in unrelated Sections to be
consistent with the application of this term. See revisions to Sections 505.2.3 and
1027.1.
Background sections for the separation requirements are as follows:
708.1 General.The following wall assemblies shall comply with this section.
1.Walls separating dwelling units in the same building as required by Section 420.2.
2.Walls separating sleeping units in the same building as required by Section 420.2.
3.Walls separating tenant spaces in covered and open mall buildings as required by Section
402.4.2.1.
4. Corridor walls as required by Section 1018.1.
5. Elevator lobby separation as required by Section 713.14.1.
708.2 Materials.The walls shall be of materials permitted by the building type of construction.
708.3 Fire-resistance rating. Fire partitions shall have a fire resistance rating of not less than 1 hour.
Exceptions:
1. Corridor walls permitted to have a 1/2 hour fire-resistance rating by Table 1018.1.
2.Dwelling unit and sleeping unit separations in buildings of Type IIB, IIIB and VB
construction shall have fire-resistance ratings of not less than 1/2 hour in buildings
equipped throughout with an automatic sprinkler system in accordance with Section
903.3.1.1.
716.5.3 Door assemblies in corridors and smoke barriers.Fire door assemblies required to have a
minimum fire protection rating of 20 minutes where located in corridor walls or smoke barrier walls
having a fire-resistance rating in accordance with Table 716.5 shall be tested in accordance with NFPA
252 or UL 10C without the hose stream test.
Exceptions:
1.Viewports that require a hole not larger than inch (25 mm)in diameter through
the door, have at least a 0.25-inch-thick(6.4 mm)glass disc and the holder is of
metal that will not melt out where subject to temperatures of 1,700°F(927°C).
2. Corridor door assemblies in occupancies of Group 1-2 shall be in accordance with
Section 407.3.1.
3. Unprotected openings shall be permitted for corridors in multitheater complexes
where each motion picture auditorium has at least one-half of its required exit or
exit access doorways opening directly to the exterior or into an exit passageway.
4. Horizontal sliding doors in smoke barriers that comply with Sections 408.3 and
408.8.4 in occupancies in Group 1-3.
716.5.3.1 Smoke and draft control.Fire door assemblies shall also meet the requirements for a
smoke and draft control door assembly tested in accordance with UL 1784.The air leakage rate of the
door assembly shall not exceed 3.0 cubic feet per minute per square foot(0.01524 m3/s I III m2)of
door opening at 0.10 inch (24.9 Pa)of water for both the ambient temperature and elevated
temperature tests. Louvers shall be prohibited. Installation of smoke doors shall be in accordance
with NFPA 105.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
716.5.3.2 Glazing in door assemblies. In a 20-minute fire door assembly,the glazing material in the
door itself shall have a minimum fire-protection-rated glazing of 20 minutes and shall be exempt from
the hose stream test.Glazing material in any other part of the door assembly, including transom
lights and sidelights,shall be tested in accordance with NFPA 257 or UL 9, including the hose stream
test, in accordance with Section 716.6.
Background information on the term "direct access" is as follows:
ANCHOR BUILDING.An exterior perimeter building of a group other than H having direct access to a
covered or open mall building but having required means of egress independent of the mall.
405.4.3 Elevators.Where elevators are provided,each compartment shall have direct access to an
elevator.Where an elevator serves more than one compartment, an elevator lobby shall be provided
and shall be separated from each compartment by a smoke barrier in accordance with Section 709.
Doors shall be gasketed, have a drop sill and be automatic-closing by smoke detection in accordance
with Section 716.5.9.3.
407.4.1 Direct access to a corridor. Habitable rooms in Group 1-2 occupancies shall have an exit
access door leading directly to a corridor.
505.2.3 Openness.A mezzanine shall be open and unobstructed to the room in which such
mezzanine is located except for walls not more than 42 inches(1067 mm) in height, columns and
posts.
Exceptions:
1.Mezzanines or portions thereof are not required to be open to the room in which the
mezzanines are located, provided that the occupant load of the aggregate area of the
enclosed space is not greater than 10.
2.A mezzanine having two or more means of egress is not required to be open to the room
in which the mezzanine is located if at least one of the means of egress provides direct
access to an exit from the mezzanine level.
3. ...
1007.6 Areas of refuge. Every required area of refuge shall be accessible from the space it serves by
an accessible means of egress.The maximum travel distance from any accessible space to an area of
refuge shall not exceed the travel distance permitted for the occupancy in accordance with Section
1016.1. Every required area of refuge shall have direct access to a stairway complying with Sections
1007.3 or an elevator complying with Section 1007.4.Where an elevator lobby is used as an area of
refuge,the shaft and lobby shall comply with Section 1022.10 for smokeproof enclosures except
where the elevators are in an area of refuge formed by a horizontal exit or smoke barrier.
1007.7.2 Outdoor facilities.Where exit access from the area serving outdoor facilities is essentially
open to the outside, an exterior area of assisted rescue is permitted as an alternative to an area of
refuge. Every required exterior area of assisted recue shall have direct access to an interior exit
stairway,exterior stairway,or elevator serving as an accessible means of egress component.The
exterior area of assisted rescue shall comply with Sections 1007.7.3 through 1007.7.6 and shall be
provided with a two-way communication system complying with Sections 1007.8.1 and 1007.8.2.
1027.1 General.Exits shall discharge directly to the exterior of the building.The exit discharge shall
be at grade or shall provide direct access to grade.The exit discharge shall not reenter a building.The
combined use of Exceptions 1 and 2 shall not exceed 50 percent of the number and capacity of the
required exits.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
1105.1.1 Parking garage entrances.Where provided, direct access for pedestrians from parking
structures to buildings or facility entrances shall be accessible.
1105.1.2 Entrances from tunnels or elevated walkways.Where direct access is provided for
pedestrians from a pedestrian tunnel or elevated walkway to a building or facility, at least one
entrance to the building or facility from each tunnel or walkway shall be accessible.
TABLE 2902.1
c.A single-occupant toilet room with one water closet and one lavatory serving not more than two adjacent patient sleeping
units shall be permitted where such room is provided with direct access from each patient sleeping unit and with provisions for
privacy.
3007.7.1 Access.The fire service access elevator lobby shall have direct access to an enclosure for an
interior exit stairway.
3008.7.1 Access.The occupant evacuation elevator lobby shall have direct access to an interior exit
stairway or ramp.
3109.4.1.8 Dwelling wall as a barrier.Where a wall of a dwelling serves as part of the barrier, one of
the following shall apply:
1. Doors with direct access to the pool through that wall shall be equipped with an alarm
that produces an audible warning when the door and/or its screen, if present, are opened.
The alarm shall be listed and labeled in accordance with UL 2017. In dwellings not required
to be Accessible units, Type A units or Type 8 units,the deactivation switch shall be located
54 inches(1372 mm)or more above the threshold of the door. In dwellings required to be
Accessible units, Type A units or Type B units,the deactivation switch shall be located not
higher than 54 inches(1372 mm)and not less than 48 inches (1219 mm)above the threshold
of the door.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 3
CONFLICTING DOORS AND SIGNAGE
Add new text as follows:
1022.10 Elevator Lobby identification signs. Doors leading to elevator lobbies from the
interior exit stairway shall be identified by signage located on the door or directly
adjacent to the door stating "Elevator Lobby." Signage shall be in accordance with
Section 1022.9.1 items 4, 5 and 6.
Exception. Where there is only one door from the interior exit stairway signage is not
required.
Reason: This issue is more specific to FSAE and the many doors required. The code
currently requires direct access from the lobby to a stairway and additionally the same
stairway must have a door that opens directly to the floor based upon standpipe access
issues (i.e. limiting the number of doors that need to be open to lay hose during a fire).
Depending upon how the stairway is laid out issues with conflicting doors may arise.
Also there is concern that this particular requirement may cause confusion for
occupants and Fire fighters in terms of way finding. The conflicting door issue is felt to
be addressed by the design process but signage is still felt necessary to direct occupants
and fire fighters as to which door leads to the elevator lobby. The elevator lobby could
be for fire service access elevators (FSAE) or occupant evacuation elevators. Due to the
more general application of these requirements and the focus on the requirements
being related to interior exit stairways the requirements are proposed in Section 1022
to help keep signage requirements together.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
TG4 PROPOSALS 10/3/2011
PROPOSAL 1
LOBBY REQUIREMENTS CHAPTER 30
713.14 Elevator, dumbwaiter and other hoistways. Elevator, dumbwaiter and other
hoistway enclosures shall be constructed in accordance with Section 713 and Chapter
30.
SECTION 3007
ELEVATOR LOBBIES
3007.1 General. Enclosed elevator lobbies shall be provided where required by Section
3007.2 or the following sections.
1. Section 405.4.3 for underground buildings.
2. Sections 407.5.3 and 711.9 for Group 1-2 occupancies.
3. Section 1007.4 for areas of refuge.
4. Section 3008.7.2 for fire service access elevators.
5. Section 3009.7.2 for occupant evacuation elevators.
3007.2 713.14.1 Enclosed elevator lobby. An enclosed elevator lobby shall be provided
at each floor where an elevator shaft enclosure connects more than three stories. The
lobby enclosure shall separate the elevator shaft enclosure doors from each floor by fire
partitions. In addition to the requirements in Section 708 for fire partitions, doors
protecting openings in the elevator lobby enclosure walls shall also comply with Section
716.5.3 as required for corridor walls and penetrations of the elevator lobby enclosure
by ducts and air transfer openings shall be protected as required for corridors in
accordance with Section 717.5.4.1. Elevator lobbies shall have at least one means of
egress complying with Chapter 10 and other provisions within this code.
Exceptions:
1. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required at the level(s) of exit discharge, provided
the level(s) of exit discharge is equipped with an automatic sprinkler system in
accordance with Section 903.3.1.1.
2. Elevators not required to be located in a shaft in accordance with Section 712.1 are
not required to have enclosed elevator lobbies.
3. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where additional doors are provided at the
hoistway opening in accordance with Section 3002.6. Such doors shall comply with the
smoke and draft control door assembly requirements in Section 716.5.3.1 when tested
in accordance with UL 1784 without an artificial bottom seal.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
4. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the building is protected by an
automatic sprinkler system installed in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2.
This exception shall not apply to the following:
4.1. Group 1-2 occupancies;
4.2. Group 1-3 occupancies; and
4.3. Elevators serving floor levels over 75 feet above the lowest level of fire department
vehicle access in high-rise buildings.
5. Smoke partitions shall be permitted in lieu of fire partitions to separate the elevator
lobby at each floor where the building is equipped throughout with an automatic
sprinkler system installed in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2.
In addition to the requirements in Section 710 for smoke partitions, doors protecting
openings in the smoke partitions shall also comply with Sections 710.5.2.2, 710.5.2.3,
and 716.5.9 and duct penetrations of the smoke partitions shall be protected as
required for corridors in accordance with Section 717.5.4.1.
6. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the elevator hoistway is pressurized
in accordance with Section 909.21.
7. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the elevator serves only open
parking garages in accordance with Section 406.5.
Renumber current Sections 3007 and 3008 accordingly.
Reason: This proposal is editorial in nature but is done with the hope of keeping the
lobby requirements easier to apply and more consistent in the future. Section 405.4.3
contains the requirements for elevator lobbies in underground buildings. Sections
407.5.3 and 711.9 contain the requirements for elevator lobbies for the protection of
horizontal assemblies in Group 1-2 occupancies. The text in Section 713.14.1.1 has been
relocated to new Section 3007.1 and editorially revised for consistency. Sections
3007.7.2 and 3008.7.2 (renumbered to 3008.7.2 and 3009.7.2 in this proposal) currently
house the requirements for fire service access elevators and occupant evacuation
elevators which have lobby construction requirements associated with them. New
Section 3007.1 in this proposal now simply references users to the appropriate sections
within the code for elevator lobby requirements. This way code users will be clear that
there are several types of lobbies and that more than one set of requirements and
triggers may apply to them. This also assists with correlation with ASME A17.1.
(responsibility of committees needs to be addressed. Suggest that FS still address this
new section 3007).
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 2
EXCEPTIONS TO PERMISSIONS
713.14 Elevator, dumbwaiter and other hoistways. Elevator, dumbwaiter and other
hoistway enclosures shall be constructed in accordance with Section 713 and Chapter
30.
713.14.1 Elevator hoistway door opening protection required. Elevator hoistway door
openings shall be protected in accordance with Section713.14.2 where an elevator
hoistway connects more than three stories, is required to be enclosed within a shaft
enclosure in accordance with Section 712.1.1 and where any of the following conditions
apply.
1. The building is not protected throughout with an automatic sprinkler system in
accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2
2. The building contains a Group 1-2 occupancy;
3. The building contains a Group 1-3 occupancy;
4. The building contains elevators serving floor levels over 75 feet above the lowest
level of fire department vehicle access in high-rise buildings.
Exceptions:
1. Protection of elevator hoistway door openings is not required where the elevator
serves only open parking garages in accordance with Section 406.5.
2. Protection of elevator hoistway door openings is not required at the level(s) of exit
discharge, provided the level(s) of exit discharge is equipped with an automatic sprinkler
system in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1.
713.14.12 Elevator hoistway door opening protection options Lobby. Where Section
713.14.1 requires protection of the elevator hoistway door opening, one of the
following protection options shall be provided.
1.-An enclosed elevator lobby shall be provided at each floor where an elevator shaft
enclosure connects more than three stories. The shall to separate the elevator hoistway
shaft enclosure doors from each floor by fire partitions in accordance with Section 708.
In addition,to the requirements in Section 708 for fire partitions, doors protecting
openings in the elevator lobby enclosure walls shall 1 e comply with Section 716.5.3 as
required for corridor walls. aA4 Penetrations of the enclosed elevator lobby enclosure
by ducts and air transfer openings shall be protected as required for corridors in
accordance with Section 717.5.4.1. Elevator lobbies shall have at I ast one means of
egress complying with Chapter 10 and other provisions within this code.
Exceptions:
1. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required at the Ievel(s) of exit discharge, provided
accordance with Section 903.3.1.1.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
2. Elevators not required to be located in a shaft in accordance with Section 712.1 are
not required to have enclosed elevator lobbies.
2. An enclosed elevator lobby shall be provided at each floor to separate the elevator
hoistway shaft enclosure doors from each floor by smoke partitions in accordance with
Section 710 where the building is equipped throughout with an automatic sprinkler
system installed in accordance with 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2. In addition, doors protecting
openings in the smoke partitions shall comply with Sections 710.5.2.2, 710.5.2.3, and
716.5.9. Penetrations of the enclosed elevator lobby by ducts and air transfer openings
shall be protected as required for corridors in accordance with Section 717.5.4.1.
3. Enclosed elevator lobbies arc not required where An additional doors shall be are
provided at the each elevator hoistway door opening in accordance with Section 3002.6.
Such door shall comply with the smoke and draft control door assembly requirements in
Section 716.5.3.1 when tested in accordance with UL 1784 without an artificial bottom
seal.
4. Enclosed elevator lobbies arc not required where the building is protected by an
automatic sprinkler system installed in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2.
This exception shall not apply to the following:
'1.1. Group 12 occupancies;
4.2. Group 13 occupancies; and
'1.3. Elevators serving floor levels over 75 feet above the lowest level of fire department
vehicle access in high rise buildings.
5. Smoke partitions shall be permitted in lieu of fire partitions to separate the elevator
lobby at ach floor where the building is equipped throughout with an automatic
In addition to the requirements in Section 710 for smoke partitions, doors protecting
openings in the smoke partitions shall also comply with Sections 710.5.2.2, 710.5.2.3,
required for corridors in accordance with Section 717.5.4.1.
4. z. - _ _ . . _ ___•- - - _ _ .' _ .. - - -- The elevator hoistway+s
shall be pressurized in accordance with Section 909.21.
713.14.3 Means of egress. Elevator lobbies shall be provided with at least one means
of egress complying with Chapter 10 and other provisions in this code.
713.14. 41 Areas of refuge. Areas of refuge shall be provided as where required in
Section 1007.
Reason: The purpose of this code change is editorial in nature and seeks only to convert
the elevator lobby section to one focused on making the current exceptions equal in
stature in the code to the main requirement for a lobby. This also removes some of the
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
confusion with having requirements within some of the exceptions. This proposal
focuses on the protection of the elevator opening into the shaft enclosure versus
requiring an elevator lobby. This allows the other exceptions to become more clear and
equal design options.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 3
LOBBY SIZE CLARIFICATION
3007.7.4 Lobby size. Regardless of the number of fire service access elevators served by
the same elevator lobby,eaeI the enclosed fire service access elevator lobby shall be a
minimum of 150 square feet (14 m2) in an area with a minimum dimension of 8 feet
(2440 mm).
Reason: This proposal is to clarify that it was not the intent to require additional space
for each additional fire service access elevator provided. The initial intent of the size
requirement was merely to provide sufficient space to conduct fire fighting operations.
The 2012 IBC has a new requirement for a second fire service access elevator which was
not related to the section on lobby size. This second elevator was initially discussed as
being needed for additional capacity but when discussed on the floor was noted as
being more for redundancy.
The current size requirement is the result of a successful Public Comment to Code
Change G197-07/08 submitted by the proponent representing the Los Angeles Fire
Department. The proponent originally wanted 50 square feet for each additional
elevator car served by the lobby but that was disapproved by the General Committee.
The Public Comment deleted the 50 square feet and added the minimum dimension
requirement of 8 feet. A detailed rationale for that approach can be found in the
Commenter's Reason submitted with the Public Comment. So this proposed code
change implements and clarifies the intent of the Public Comment that was approved by
the ICC governmental voting representatives.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 4
SMOKE BARRIER CONTINUITY
709.4 Continuity. Smoke barriers shall form an effective membrane continuous from
outside wall to outside wall and from the top of the foundation or floor/ceiling assembly
below to the underside of the floor or roof sheathing, deck or slab above, including
continuity through concealed spaces, such as those found above suspended ceilings,
and interstitial structural and mechanical spaces. The supporting construction shall be
protected to afford the required fire-resistance rating of the wall or floor supported in
buildings of other than Type 11B, 111B or VB construction.
Exceptions:
1. Smoke-barrier walls are not required in interstitial spaces where such spaces are
designed and constructed with ceilings that provide resistance to the passage of fire and
smoke equivalent to that provided by the smoke-barrier walls.
2. Smoke barriers used fe-F to enclose elevator lobbies in accordance with Section
405.4.3, 1007.6.2, 3007.7.2 or 3008.7.2 shall be permitted to terminate at the elevator
hoistway shaft enclosure. not required to cxtcnd from outsidc wall to outsidc wall. A
smoke and draft control door assembly as specified in Section 716.5.3.1 shall not be
required at each elevator hoistway door opening.
3. Smoke barriers used for areas of refuge in accordance with Section 1007.6.2 are not
required to extend from outside wall to outside wall.
Reason: Provisions are necessary to clarify that opening protection at the hoistway
opening is not necessary when an enclosed elevator lobby is provided in accordance
with Section 405.4.3, 3007.7.2, or 3008.7.2. An enclosed elevator lobby protects the
hoistway from smoke migration, therefore the hoistway is already protected. In
addition the shaft walls provide sufficient smoke and draft protection to allow the
smoke barriers to terminate at those walls.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
For Proposal 4:
Smoke Barrier
Elevator Hoistway Termination Smoke
Shaft Enclosure Barrier
)1t_
IEnclosed
Elevator Lobby I Smoke and Draft
Control Door
Assembly Not
Required
Smoke and Draft Control
Door Assembly
SEC 709.4,EXCEPTION 2-SMOKE BARRIER TERMINATION
AT ELEVATOR HOISTWAY SHAFT ENCLOSURE
Page 40
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 5
AREA OF REFUGE CORRELATION
1007.6 Areas of refuge. Every required area of refuge shall be accessible from the space
it serves by an accessible means of egress.
1007.6.1 Travel distance. The maximum travel distance from any accessible space to an
area of refuge shall not exceed the travel distance permitted for the occupancy in
accordance with Section 1016.1.
1007.6.2 Stairway or elevator access. Every required area of refuge shall have direct
access to a stairway within an exit enclosure complying with Sections 1007.3 and 1022
or an elevator complying with Section 1007.4.
Where an elevator lobby is used as an arca of refuge , the shaft and lobby shall comply
with Section 1022.9 for smokeproof enclosures except where the elevators arc in an
arca of refuge formed by a horizontal exit or smoke barrier.
1007.6.3. Enclosed elevator lobbies. Where enclosed elevator lobbies are used as an
area of refuge the hoistway shall be pressurized in accordance with Section 909.21.
Hoistway pressurization is not required where the elevators are in an area of refuge
formed by a horizontal exit or smoke barrier which extends from outside wall to outside
wall.
1007.6.24 Separation. Each area of refuge shall be separated from the remainder of the
story by a smoke barrier complying with Section 709 or a horizontal exit complying with
Section 1025. Each area of refuge shall be designed to minimize the intrusion of smoke.
Exception: Areas of refuge located within an enclosure for exit access stairways or
interior exit stairways complying with Section 1009.3 or Section 1022.
1007.6.35 Two-way communication.Areas of refuge shall be provided with a two-way
communication system complying with Sections 1007.8.1 and 1007.8.2.
Reason: This section currently requires that when an elevator lobby is used as an area
of refuge that the lobby and the hoistway be protected as a smokeproof enclosure.
Reference to the smoke proof enclosure requirements seemed inappropriate as they
are focused upon stairs and would not be practical to apply to elevator lobbies. For
instance it is unclear if an elevator lobby would be required to have a vestibule. Also if
the pressurization option is chosen the criteria and requirements are focused upon
stairs not elevator hoistway pressurization. The solution was to provide an equivalent
approach in intent that was more focused upon elevators. Therefore the approach was
to make an attempt at an alternative solution using the smoke barrier separation
(already required for all areas of refuge) and adding hoistway pressurization(Section
909.21) to the requirements. The exception for horizontal exits and smoke barriers
was retained and clarified. More specifically the clarification was that smoke barriers
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
are required to extend from outside wall to outside wall not to be confused with the
allowance in Section 709.4.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 6
CORRIDOR SMOKE AND DRAFT ASSEMBLY REQUIREMENTS
Revise as follows:
716.5.3.1 Smoke and draft control. Fire door assemblies shall also meet the
requirements for a smoke and draft control door assembly tested in accordance with UL
1784. The air leakage rate of the door assembly shall not exceed 3.0 cubic feet per
minute per square foot (0.01524 m3/s • m2) of door opening at 0.10 inch (24.9 Pa) of
water for both the ambient temperature and elevated temperature tests. Louvers shall
be prohibited. Installation of smoke doors shall be in accordance with NFPA 105.
Exception: Where enclosed elevator lobbies are not required by Section
713.14.1, elevator hoistway doors opening into a corridor are not required to
meet the requirements for a smoke and draft control door assembly unless
Exception 3 to Section 713.14.1 applies.
Reason: This proposal is intended to clarify that when an elevator lobby is not required
in accordance with Section 713.14.1 that smoke and draft protection is not required
when the hoistway opens into a rated corridor. See figure below. Section 713.14.1 is
based upon number of stories and not the fact that such elevators open onto a rated
corridor so it is not entirely clear how the code is currently written that this was the
intent . The following are the sections that are relevant to this issue and which
demonstrate how such confusion could occur. The Lobby provisions are independent
from the corridor provisions. To avoid confusion on the application of this exception
with the application of exception 3 to Section 713.14.1 reference has been made to the
exception in 713.14.1. This makes it clear that this relationship has been considered and
it was not intended to still require that exception to be applied.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
For Proposal 6:
Elevator Hoistway
Shaft Enclosure
0
I U
Smoke and Draft
I Control Door Assembly
Not Required
SECTION 716.5.3.1,EXCEPTION—SMOKE
AND DRAFT CONTROL AT HOISTWAY
713.14 Elevator,dumbwaiter and other hoistways.Elevator,dumbwaiter and other hoistway enclosures
shall be constructed in accordance with Section 713 and Chapter 30.
713.14.1 Elevator lobby.An enclosed elevator lobby shall be provided at each floor where an elevator shaft
enclosure connects more than three stories.The lobby enclosure shall separate the elevator shaft enclosure
doors from each floor by fire partitions. In addition to the requirements in Section 708 for fire partitions,
doors protecting openings in the elevator lobby enclosure walls shall also comply with Section 716.5.3 as
required for corridor walls and penetrations of the elevator lobby enclosure by ducts and air transfer
openings shall be protected as required for corridors in accordance with Section 717.5.4.1. Elevator lobbies
shall have at least one means of egress complying with Chapter 10 and other provisions within this code.
Exceptions:
1. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required at the level(s)of exit discharge,provided the level(s)of exit
discharge is equipped with an automatic sprinkler system in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1.
2. Elevators not required to be located in a shaft in accordance with Section 712.1 are not required to have
enclosed elevator lobbies.
3.Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where additional doors are provided at the hoistway opening
in accordance with Section 3002.6.Such doors shall comply with the smoke and draft control door assembly
requirements in Section 716.5.3.1 when tested in accordance with UL 1784 without an artificial bottom seal.
4. Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the building is protected by an automatic sprinkler
system installed in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2.This exception shall not apply to the
following:
4.1.Group 1-2 occupancies;
4.2.Group 1-3 occupancies;and
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
4.3. Elevators serving floor levels over 75 feet above the lowest level of fire department vehicle access in
high-rise buildings.
5.Smoke partitions shall be permitted in lieu of fire partitions to separate the elevator lobby at each floor
where the building is equipped throughout with an automatic sprinkler system installed in accordance with
Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2.In addition to the requirements in Section 710 for smoke partitions,doors
protecting openings in the smoke partitions shall also comply with Sections 710.5.2.2,710.5.2.3,and
716.5.9 and duct penetrations of the smoke partitions shall be protected as required for corridors in
accordance with Section 717.5.4.1.
6.Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the elevator hoistway is pressurized in accordance with
Section 909.21.
7.Enclosed elevator lobbies are not required where the elevator serves only open parking garages in
accordance with Section 406.3.
713.14.1.1 Areas of refuge.Areas of refuge shall be provided as required in Section 1007.
SECTION 1018 CORRIDORS
1018.1 Construction.Corridors shall be fire-resistance rated in accordance with Table 1018.1.The corridor
walls required to be fire-resistance rated shall comply with Section 709 for fire partitions.
Exceptions:
1.Afire-resistance rating is not required for corridors in an occupancy in Group E where each room that is
used for instruction has at least one door opening directly to the exterior and rooms for assembly purposes
have at least one-half of the required means of egress doors opening directly to the exterior.Exterior doors
specified in this exception are required to be at ground level.
2.Afire-resistance rating is not required for corridors contained within a dwelling or sleeping unit in an
occupancy in Group R.
3.Afire-resistance rating is not required for corridors in open parking garages.
4.Afire-resistance rating is not required for corridors in an occupancy in Group B which is a space requiring
only a single means of egress complying with Section 1015.1.
S.Corridors adjacent to the exterior walls of buildings shall be permitted to have unprotected openings on
unrated exterior wall where unrated walls are permitted by Table 602 and unprotected openings are
permitted by Table 705.8.
SECTION 708 FIRE PARTITIONS
708.1 General.The following wall assemblies shall comply with this section.
1.Walls separating dwelling units in the same building as required by Section 420.2.
2.Walls separating sleeping units in the same building as required by Section 420.2.
3.Walls separating tenant spaces in covered mall buildings as required by Section 402.7.2.
4.Corridor walls as required by Section 1018.1.
5.Elevator lobby separation as required by Section 713.14.1.
708.2 Materials.The walls shall be of materials permitted by the building type of construction.
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CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
708.3 Fire-resistance rating.Fire partitions shall have a fire-resistance rating of not less than 1 hour.
Exceptions:
1.Corridor walls permitted to have a 1/2 hour fire-resistance rating by Table 1018.1.
2.Dwelling unit and sleeping unit separations in buildings of Type IIB, IIIB and VB construction shall have
fire-resistance ratings of not less than 1/2 hour in buildings equipped throughout with an automatic sprinkler
system in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1.
708.6 Openings.Openings in a fire partition shall be protected in accordance with Section 716.
SECTION 710 SMOKE PARTITIONS
710.1 General.Smoke partitions installed as required elsewhere in the code shall comply with this section.
710.5 Openings.Openings in smoke partitions shall comply with Sections 710.5.1 and 710.5.2.
710.5.1 Windows.Windows in smoke partitions shall be sealed to resist the free passage of smoke or be
automatic-closing upon detection of smoke.
710.5.2 Doors.Doors in smoke partitions shall comply with Sections 710.5.2.1 through 710.5.2.3.
710.5.2.1 Louvers.Doors in smoke partitions shall not include louvers.
710.5.2.2 Smoke and draft control doors.Where required elsewhere in the code,doors in smoke partitions
shall meet the requirements for a smoke and draft control door assembly tested in accordance with UL
1784.The air leakage rate of the door assembly shall not exceed 3.0 cubic feet per minute per square foot
(0.015424 m3/(s•m2))of door opening at 0.10 inch(24.9 Pa)of water for both the ambient temperature
test and the elevated temperature exposure test.Installation of smoke doors shall be in accordance with
NFPA 105.
SECTION 716 OPENING PROTECTIVES
716.1 General.Opening protectives required by other sections of this code shall comply with the provisions
of this section.
716.5 Fire door and shutter assemblies.Approved fire door and fire shutter assemblies shall be constructed
of any material or assembly of component materials that conforms to the test requirements of Section
716.5.1,716.5.2 or 716.5.3 and the fire protection rating indicated in Table 716.5.Fire door frames with
transom lights,sidelights or both shall be permitted in accordance with Section 716.5.6.Fire door
assemblies and shutters shall be installed in accordance with the provisions of this section and NFPA 80.
Exceptions:
1.Labeled protective assemblies that conform to the requirements of this section or UL 10A,UL 14B and UL
14C for tin-clad fire door assemblies.
2.Floor fire door assemblies in accordance with Section 711.8.
TABLE 716.5 OPENING FIRE PROTECTION ASSEMBLIES,RATINGS AND MARKINGS.
Page 46
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
MINIMUM FIRE RATED MINIMUM FIRE RATED
REQUIRED FIRE DOOR DOOR GLAZING SIDELIGHT/ GLAZING
WALL AND FIRE
TYPE OF VISION MARKING TRANSOM MARKING
ASSEMBLY SHUTTER
ASSEMBLY RATING ASSEMBLY PANEL DOOR ASSEMBLY SIDELITE/
(hours) RATING SIZE VISIONRATING TRANSOM
(hours) PANELe (hours) PANEL
Fire
partitions: 0.5 1/36 Maximum 1/3 D-H-OH-20
Corridor walls size D-20
tested
716.5.3 Door assemblies in corridors and smoke barriers.Fire door assemblies required to have a minimum
fire protection rating of 20 minutes where located in corridor walls or smoke barrier walls having a fire-
resistance rating in accordance with Table 716.5 shall be tested in accordance with NFPA 252 or UL 10C
without the hose stream test.
Exceptions:
1.Viewports that require a hole not larger than 1 inch(25 mm)in diameter through the door,have at least
a 0.25-inch-thick(6.4 mm)glass disc and the holder is of metal that will not melt out where subject to
temperatures of 1,700°F(927°C).
2.Corridor door assemblies in occupancies of Group 1-2 shall be in accordance with Section 407.3.1.
3.Unprotected openings shall be permitted for corridors in multitheater complexes where each motion
picture auditorium has at least one-half of its required exit or exit access doorways opening directly to the
exterior or into an exit passageway.
4.Horizontal sliding doors in smoke barriers that comply with Sections 408.3 and 408.8.4 in occupancies in
Group 1-3.
Page 47
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 7
TERMINOLOGY FOR ELEVATOR LOBBIES
Add new definitions as follows:
ELEVATOR LOBBY. A space (enclosed or unenclosed) in front of the elevator hoistway
opening where occupants exit or enter an elevator.
Reason: There is often confusion with the term lobby versus elevator lobby . This
provides a specific definition for an elevator lobby and also clarifies that lobbies can be
open or enclosed. Often the term elevator lobby is used to simply describe the place
where people enter or exit a lobby and is not necessarily an enclosed space.
Page 48
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 8
LINKS TO 3008 AND 3007
713.14.1.1 Areas of refuge. Where an area of refuge is required and an enclosed
elevator lobby is provided to serve as an areas of refuge, the enclosed elevator lobby
shall comply with as required in Section 1007.6.
713.14.1.2 Fire Service Access Elevators. Where fire service access elevators are
provided, enclosed elevator lobbies shall comply with Section 3007.
713.14.1.3 Occupant Evacuation Elevators. Where occupant evacuation elevators are
provided, enclosed elevator lobbies shall comply with Section 3008.
713.14.1.4 Underground buildings. Where enclosed elevator lobbies are required for
underground buildings such lobbies shall comply with Section 405.4.3.
713.14.1.5 Group 1-2 occupancies. Enclosed elevator lobbies required in Group 1-2
Occupancies in accordance with Sections 407.5.3 and 711.9 shall comply with Section
713.14.1.
Reason. This proposal simply provides clarification as to where all the enclosed elevator
lobby requirements are located in other portions of the code. Section 713.14.1.1 was
revised to be consistent in approach to the new Sections 713.14.1.2 and 713.14.1.3.
Sections 713.14.1.4 and 713.14.5 were added to be consistent with the concept of
pointing to other relevant sections requiring enclosed elevator lobbies. If provisions are
moved from Chapter 7 to Chapter 30 this proposal is no longer necessary.
Page 49
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
PROPOSAL 9
LOBBY SIZE CLARIFICATION
3007.7.4 Lobby size. Enclosed fire service access elevator lobby shall be a minimum of
150 square feet (14 m2) in an area with a minimum dimension of 8 feet (2440 mm).
Where elevator lobbies also serve an elevator that is part of an accessible means of
egress in accordance with Section 1007.4, the elevator lobby size shall be increased to
accommodate wheelchairs spaces in accordance with 1007.6.1.
Reason: Where building are five stories or taller, one of the accessible means of egress
must be provided by an elevator with standby power. While Section 1007.3 does allow
for no area of refuge in a sprinklered building, the occupant will typically move into the
fire service access elevator lobby to wait for fire department assistance to evacuate.
Space should be made available so that both assisted evacuation and fire department
staging can occur in the same space, even though hopefully this will be for a minimum
amount of time. In addition, this will help clarify that one elevator can serve both
purposes.
Page 50
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
TG RISK ASSESSMENT — PROPOSAL
HOISTWAY VENTING
Option A — simply exempting all sprinklered buildings
SECTION 3004
HOISTWAY VENTING
3004.1 Vents required. Hoistways of elevators and dumbwaiters penetrating more than
three stories shall be provided with a means for venting smoke and hot gases to the
outer air in case of fire.
Exceptions:
1. In occupancies of other than Groups R 1, R 2, 11, 12 and similar occupancies
with overnight sleeping units , Venting of hoistways is not required where the building is
equipped throughout with an approved automatic sprinkler system installed in
accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2.
2. Sidewalk elevator hoistways are not required to be vented.
3. Elevators contained within and serving open parking garages only.
4. Elevators within individual residential dwelling units .
3004.2 Location of vents. Vents shall be located at the top the hoistway and shall open
either directly to the outer air or through noncombustible ducts to the outer air.
Noncombustible ducts shall be permitted to pass through the elevator machine room,
provided that portions of the ducts located outside the hoistway or machine room are
enclosed by construction having not less than the fire-resistance rating required for the
hoistway. Holes in the machine room floors for the passage of ropes, cables or other
moving elevator equipment shall be limited as not to provide greater than 2 inches (51
mm) of clearance on all sides.
3004.3 Area of vents. Except as provided for in Section 3004.3.1, the area of the vents
shall not be less than 31/2 percent of the area of the hoistway nor less than 3 square
feet (0.28 m2) for each elevator car, and not less than 31/2 percent nor less than 0.5
square feet (0.047 m2) for each dumbwaiter car in the hoistway, whichever is greater.
Of the total required vent area, not less than one-third shall be permanently open.
Closed portions of the required vent area shall consist of openings glazed with annealed
glass not greater than 1/8 inch (3.2 mm) in thickness.
Exception: The total required vent area shall not be required to be permanently open
where all the vent openings automatically open upon detection of smoke in the elevator
lobbies or hoistway, upon power failure and upon activation of a manual override
Page 51
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
control. The manual override control shall be capable of opening and closing the vents
and shall be located in an approved location.
3004.3.1 Reduced vent area. Where mechanical ventilation conforming to the
International Mechanical Code is provided, a reduction in the required vent area is
allowed provided that all of the following conditions are met:
1. The occupancy is not in Group R-1, R-2, I-1 or 1-2 or of a similar occupancy with
overnight sleeping units.
2. The vents required by Section 3004.2 do not have outside exposure.
3. The hoistway does not extend to the top of the building.
4. The hoistway and machine room exhaust fan is automatically reactivated by
thermostatic means.
5. Equivalent venting of the hoistway is accomplished.
3004.4 Plumbing and mechanical systems. Plumbing and mechanical systems shall not
be located in an elevator shaft.
Exception: Floor drains, sumps and sump pumps shall be permitted at the base of the
shaft provided they are indirectly connected to the plumbing system.
Reason: The purpose of hoistway venting is unclear in terms of the original intent.
Provisions date back to the 1950s, but appear to be focused more upon fire fighting and
post-fire overhaul. Since that time, the provisions have shifted for vents to be readily
available (always open) or to operate automatically via a smoke detector in the lobby or
the hoistway. The concern is that in a sprinklered building such venting serves little
purpose and may have the effect of drawing smoke through the building where it is not
appropriate. This is a specific concern after consideration of overall smoke movement
by the CTC Elevator Lobby Study Group related to stack effect and preventing smoke
movement throughout the building. This provision also conflicts with the allowance for
hoistway pressurization in accordance with Section 909.21 which does not currently
exempt hoistway venting when using pressurization.
Page 52
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
Option B- Deleting hoistway venting requirements
SECTION 3004
HOISTWAY VENTING
three stories shall be provided with a m ans for venting smoke and hot gases to the
outer air in case of fire.
T
1. In occupancies of other than Groups R 1, R 2, 11, 12 and similar occupancies
with overnight sleeping units , Venting of hoistways is not required where the building is
equipped throughout with an approved automatic sprinkler system installed in
accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2.
2. Sidewalk elevator hoistways arc not required to be vented.
3. Elevators contained within and serving open parking garages only.
1. Elevators within individual residential dwelling units .
. ., - - - - - - - •. - - - - - -- -- -- - . . - - --
either directly to the outer air or through noncombustible ducts to the outer air.
Noncombustible ducts shall be permitted to pass through the elevator machine room,
provided that portions of the ducts located outside the hoistway or machine room are
enclosed by construction having not less than the fire resistance rating required for the
hoistway. Holes in the machine room floors for the passage of ropes, cables or other
moving elevator equipment shall be limited as not to provide greater than 2 inches (51
mm) of clearance on all sides.
3004.3 Area of vents. Except as provided for in Section 3004.3.1, the area of the vents
shall not be less than 31/2 percent of the ar a of the hoistway nor less than 3 square
square feet (0.047 m2) for each dumbwaiter car in the hoistway, whichever is gr ater.
Of the total required vent area, not less than one third shall be permanently open.
Closed portions of the required vent ar a shall consist of openings glazed with ann aled
glass not gr ater than 1/8 inch (3.2 mm) in thickness.
where all the vent openings automatically open upon detection of smoke in the elevator
lobbies or hoistway, upon power failure and upon activation of a manual override
control. The manual override control shall be capable of opening and closing the vents
and shall be located in an approved location.
3001.3.1 Reduced vent arca. Where mechanical ventilation conforming to the
International Mechanical Code is provided, a reduction in the required vent area is
1. The occupancy is not in Group R 1, R 2, I 1 or 12 or of a similar occupancy with
overnight sleeping units .
2. The vents required by Section 3004.2 do not have outside exposure.
3. The hoistway does not extend to the top of the building.
Page 53
CTC Elevator Lobby SG 10/7/2011
1. The hoistway and machine room exhaust fan is automatically reactivated by
thermostatic m ans.
5. Equivalent venting of the hoistway is accomplished.
3004 Plumbing and Mechanical Systems
3004.4 General ' - -- -- - - - -- - - - -' - - -- . Plumbing and mechanical systems
shall not be located in an elevator shaft.
Exception: Floor drains, sumps and sump pumps shall be permitted at the base of the
shaft provided they are indirectly connected to the plumbing system.
Reason: The purpose of hoistway venting is unclear in terms of the original intent.
Provisions date back to the 1950s but appear to be focused more upon fire fighting and
post-fire overhaul. Since that time, the provisions have shifted for the vents to be
readily available (always open) or to operate automatically via a smoke detector in the
lobby or the hoistway. The concern is that such venting may have the effect of drawing
smoke through the building where it is not appropriate. This is a specific concern after
consideration of overall smoke movement by the CTC Elevator Lobby Study Group
related to stack effect and preventing smoke movement throughout the building. This
provision also conflicts with the allowance for hoistway pressurization in accordance
with Section 909.21 which does not currently exempt hoistway venting when using
pressurization. Furthermore, the requirement for hoistway venting has been removed
from the ASME/ANSI Elevator Code; no conflict will result from this change.
Page 54
Generated by COM check-Web Software
Envelope Compliance Certificate
Section 1: Project Information
Energy Code:2014 Oregon Energy Efficiency Specialty Code
Project Title: Red Rock Creek Commons
Project Type: New Construction
Envelope Compliance Method:Simplified Trade-Off
Construction Site: Owner/Agent: Designer/Contractor:
11090 SW 68th Parkway Oregon Anna Galloway
Tigard,Oregon 97223 Carleton Hart Architecture
830 SW 10th Ave,#200
Portland,Oregon 97205
503-206-3193
anna.galloway@carletonhart.com
Building Location(for weather data): Tigard,Oregon
Climate Zone: 4c
Vertical Glazing/Wall Area Pct.: 17%
Building Use:Area Type Floor Area
1-Multifamily:Residential 36708
Section 2: Envelope Assemblies and Requirements Checklist
Envelope PASSES:Design 3%better than code.
Envelope Assemblies:
Component Name/Description Gross Cavity Cont. Proposed Budget
Area or R-Value R-Value U-Factor U-Factor(a)
Perimeter
Roof:Insulation Entirely Above Deck,[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily] 9192 --- 30.0 0.032 0.048
Ext.Wall 1:Wood-Framed,16in.o.c.,[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily] 20333 24.0 6.0 0.041 0.064
Window:Vinyl Frame,Perf.Specs.:Product ID VPI,SHGC 0.30, 2058 --- --- 0.290 0.350
[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily](b)
Window:Vinyl Frame,Perf.Specs.:Product ID VPI,SHGC 0.30,PF 904 --- --- 0.290 0.350
0.25,[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily](b)
Window:Vinyl Frame,Perf.Specs.:Product ID VPI,SHGC 0.30,PF 220 --- --- 0.290 0.350
0.22,[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily](b)
Window:,Perf.Specs.:Product ID Kawneer,SHGC 0.40, PF 1.05, 188 --- --- 0.440 0.450
[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily](b)
Window:, Pert Specs.:Product ID Kawneer,SHGC 0.30, PF 2.90, 52 --- --- 0.440 0.450
[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily](b)
Window:,Perf.Specs.:Product ID Kawneer,SHGC 0.30, PF 0.70, 190 --- 0.440 0.450
[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily](b)
Ext.Wall 2:Solid Concrete,9in.Thickness,Normal Density,Furring: 225 --- 8.0 0.101 0.090
None,[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily]
Floor 1:Wood-Framed,[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily] 4814 39.0 0.0 0.026 0.033
Floor 2:Unheated Slab-On-Grade,Horizontal with vertical 2 ft., 329 --- 10.0
[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily]
Ext.Wall 2:Solid Concrete,6in.Thickness,Normal Density,Furring: 278 --- 0.0 0.810 0.090
None,[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily]
Door:Insulated Metal,Swinging,[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily] 84 --- --- 0.200 0.700
Basement 1:Solid Concrete,6in.Thickness,Normal Density, 78 --- 0.0 0.810 0.108
Furring:None,Wall Ht 9.0,Depth B.G.0.5,[Bldg.Use 1 -
Multifamily]
Basement 2:Solid Concrete,6in.Thickness,Normal Density, 141 --- 0.0 0.810 0.108
Furring:None,Wall Ht 9.0,Depth B.G. 1.0,[Bldg.Use 1 -
Multifamily]
Project Title: Red Rock Creek Commons Report date: 03/06/19
Data filename: Page 1 of 3
I
Basement 3:Solid Concrete,6in.Thickness,Normal Density, 385 --- 0.0 0.810 0.108
Furring:None,Wall Ht 9.0,Depth B.G.0.0,[Bldg.Use 1 -
Multifamily]
Floor 3:Unheated Slab-On-Grade,Horizontal with vertical 2 ft., 108 --- 10.0
[Bldg.Use 1 -Multifamily]
(a)Budget U-factors are used for software baseline calculations ONLY,and are not code requirements.
(b)Fenestration product performance must be certified in accordance with NFRC and requires supporting documentation.
In the following requirements,blank checkboxes identify requirements that the applicant has not acknowledged as being met. Checkmarks
identify requirements that the applicant acknowledges are met or excepted from compliance. 'Plans reference page/section'identifies where in
the plans/specs the requirement can be verified as being satisfied.
Fenestration Product Rating:
• 1. U-factors of fenestration products(windows,doors and skylights)are determined in accordance with NFRC 100 by an accredited,
independent laboratory,and labeled and certified by the manufacturer or are determined using the commercial size category values
listed in Chapter 15 of the 2009 ASHRAE Handbook of Fundamentals,Table No.4 and shall include the effects of the window frame.
The temporary label afixed to the fenestration products must not be removed prior to inspection.
Plans reference page/section:A9.11. Specification sections 08 41 13. 08 53 13. 08 80 00
• 2. Solar heat gain coefficient(SHGC)of glazed fenestration products(windows,glazed doors and skylights)shall be determined in
accordance with NFRC 200 by an accredited,independent laboratory,and labeled and certified by the manufacturer or be determined
using the Solar Heat Gain Coefficients(SHGC)in Chapter 15 of the 2009 ASHRAE Handbook of Fundamentals,Table No.10.The
overall values must consider type of frame material and operator for the SHGC at normal incidence.
Plans reference page/section:A9.11, Specification sections 08 41 13, 08 53 13. 08 80 00
Air Leakage, Insulation, and Component Certification:
3. Sealing of the building envelope.Openings and penetrations in the building envelope are sealed with caulking materials or closed with
gasketing systems compatible with the construction materials and location.Joints and seams are sealed in the same manner or taped
or covered with a moisture vapor-permeable wrapping material.Sealing materials spanning joints between construction materials allow
for expansion and contraction of the construction materials.
Plans reference page/section: A8.11-A8.54
• 4. Window and door assemblies.The air leakage of window and sliding or swinging door assemblies that are part of the building envelope
are determined in accordance with AAMA/WDMA/CSA 101/I.S.2/A440,or NFRC 400 by an accredited,independent laboratory,and
labeled and certified by the manufacturer.
Plans reference page/section:A9.01.A9.11.Specification sections 08 11 13. 08 31 13. 08 53 13
• 5. Curtain wall,storefront glazing and commercial entrance doors.Curtain wall,storefront glazing and commercial-glazed swinging
entrance doors and revolving doors are tested for air leakage in accordance with ASTM E 283. For curtain walls and storefront glazing,
the maximum air leakage rate is 0.3 cubic foot per minute per square foot of fenestration area.For commercial glazed swinging
entrance doors and revolving doors,the maximum air leakage rate is 1.00 cfm/ft2 of door area.
Plans reference page/section:A9.11. Specification section 08 41 13
• 6. Building thermal envelope insulation.An R-value identification mark is applied(by manufacturer)to each piece of insulation 12
inches or greater in width.Alternately,the insulation installers have provided a signed,dated and posted certification listing the type,
manufacturer and R-value of insulation installed.Refer to code section for blown or sprayed insulation installation/settling depths and
marker requirements.
7. Insulation mark installation.Insulating materials are installed such that the manufacturer's R-value mark is readily observable upon
inspection.
• 8. Insulation product rating.The thermal resistance(R-value)of insulation has been determined in accordance with the U.S.FTC R-value
rule.
• 9. Installation.All material,systems and equipment are installed in accordance with the manufacturer's installation instructions and the
International Building Code.
• 10.Outdoor air intakes and exhaust openings.Stair and elevator shaft vents and other outdoor air intakes and exhaust openings integral
to the building envelope shall be equipped with not less than a Class I motorized,leakage-rated damper with a maximum leakage rate
of 4 cfm per square foot at 1.0 inch water gauge when tested in accordance with AMCA 500D.Stair and shaft vent dampers shall be
capable of being automatically closed during normal building operation and interlocked to open as required by fire and smoke detection
systems.
Requirement is not applicable.
Plans reference page/section:
• 11.Loading dock weatherseals.Cargo doors and loading dock doors are equipped with weather seals to restrict infiltration when vehicles
are parked in the doorway.
Requirement is not applicable.
Project Title: Red Rock Creek Commons Report date: 03/06/19
Data filename: Page 2 of 3
•
Plans reference page/section:
12.Recessed lighting. Recessed luminaires installed in the building thermal envelope are sealed to limit air leakage between conditioned
and unconditioned spaces.All recessed luminaires are IC-rated and labeled as meeting ASTM E 283.All recessed luminaires are
sealed with a gasket or caulk between the housing and interior wall or ceiling covering.
Plans reference page/section: A8.53.A8.54.A9.21
13.Vestibules.Doors that separate conditioned space from the exterior are protected with an enclosed vestibule,with all doors of the
vestibule equipped with self-closing devices.Vestibules are designed so interior and exterior doors to not operate simultaneously.
,/ Exception applies:Doors that open directly from a space less than 3000 sq.ft.in area.
Plans reference page/section:A2.00. A2.01
14:Other'components have supporting documentation for proposed U-Factors.
Requirement is not applicable.
Plans reference page/section:
Section 3: Compliance Statement
Compliance Statement: The proposed envelope design represented in this document is consistent with the building plans,specifications and
other calculations submitted with this permit application.The proposed envelope system has been designed to meet the 2014 Oregon Energy
Efficiency Specialty Code requirements in COMcheck-Web and to comply with the mandatory requirements in the Requirements Checklist.
Name-Title Signature Date
Project Title: Red Rock Creek Commons Report date:03/06/19
Data filename: Page 3 of 3