Building Codes
This skill provides practitioner-grade knowledge of building codes for architectural
design, focusing on the International Building Code (IBC) as the primary framework
with international comparisons. All dimensional values are given in metric with
imperial equivalents where standard practice requires.
Section 1: IBC Occupancy Groups
The IBC classifies every building or portion of a building into one of 10 occupancy
groups based on its use and the characteristics of its occupants. Correct classification
is the single most consequential code decision an architect makes -- it drives
construction type, height and area limits, egress requirements, fire separation,
and plumbing fixture counts.
Group A -- Assembly
Buildings where people gather for civic, social, or recreational purposes. The defining
characteristic is a concentration of persons who are generally unfamiliar with the
building layout, making egress critical.
A-1: Assembly with fixed seating for viewing performances
- Examples: theaters, concert halls, cinemas, lecture halls with fixed seats
- Occupant load factor: 0.65 m² net per person (7 ft² net) for fixed seating;
count actual seats when installed
- Typical fire load: moderate (30-60 MJ/m²), but high life-safety risk from
concentrated occupancy
- Key code requirements: panic hardware on exit doors, illuminated exit signs,
emergency voice/alarm communication for occupant loads > 300, accessible seating
dispersed per ADA/ICC A117.1
A-2: Assembly for food and/or drink consumption
- Examples: restaurants, bars, nightclubs, banquet halls, cafeterias
- Occupant load factor: 1.4 m² net per person (15 ft² net) for unconcentrated
tables/chairs; 0.65 m² net (7 ft²) for standing/concentrated use
- Typical fire load: moderate to high (40-80 MJ/m²) due to kitchen equipment
- Key code requirements: commercial kitchen hood suppression (Type I hood per
IMC 507), grease duct fire protection, separation from assembly seating
A-3: Assembly for worship, recreation, or amusement not in A-1/A-2
- Examples: churches, mosques, synagogues, museums, galleries, libraries (reading
rooms), community halls, bowling alleys, courtrooms
- Occupant load factor: 0.65 m² net per person (7 ft² net) for worship with
fixed pews; 1.4 m² net (15 ft²) for unconcentrated use; museums and galleries
2.8 m² net (30 ft²)
- Typical fire load: variable (20-80 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: museums with irreplaceable collections warrant
sprinkler protection regardless of threshold; libraries with stack areas
use 9.3 m² gross (100 ft²) per person
A-4: Assembly for viewing indoor sporting events
- Examples: arenas, skating rinks, indoor swimming pool spectator areas
- Occupant load factor: 0.65 m² net per person (7 ft² net) for fixed seating;
count seats
- Typical fire load: low to moderate (20-50 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: similar to A-1; crowd management plan for large venues;
smoke-protected assembly seating provisions (IBC 1029) allow increased travel
distance to 122 m (400 ft) when open-air or smoke-protected
A-5: Assembly for outdoor activities
- Examples: outdoor stadiums, grandstands, bleachers, amusement park structures
- Occupant load factor: count seats or 0.65 m² net (7 ft²) for fixed seating
- Typical fire load: very low
- Key code requirements: IBC 1029 smoke-protected assembly provisions typically
apply; less restrictive construction type requirements due to open-air nature
Group B -- Business
Buildings for office, professional, or service transactions.
- Examples: offices, banks, outpatient clinics (fewer than 5 care recipients
incapable of self-preservation), government buildings, laboratories testing
and research (non-hazardous), post offices, radio/TV stations, educational
above 12th grade (universities)
- Occupant load factor: 9.3 m² gross per person (100 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: moderate (40-80 MJ/m²), primarily paper and furnishings
- Key code requirements: less restrictive than assembly; corridor rating may be
0 hr when sprinklered (Table 1020.1); max travel distance 76 m (250 ft)
sprinklered, 61 m (200 ft) unsprinklered
Group E -- Educational
Buildings used for education through the 12th grade by 6 or more students.
- Examples: schools (K-12), day care for more than 5 children older than 2.5 years
- Occupant load factor: 1.9 m² net per person (20 ft² net) for classrooms
- Typical fire load: moderate (30-60 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: storm shelter provisions per ICC 500 in tornado-prone
regions; fire alarm with voice/evacuation capability; classroom doors must
be lockable from inside (active-shooter provisions, IBC 1010.1.4.4)
Group F -- Factory and Industrial
Buildings for assembling, fabricating, manufacturing, or processing goods.
F-1: Factory Industrial Moderate-Hazard
- Examples: aircraft manufacturing, furniture manufacturing, millwork, printing,
woodworking
- Occupant load factor: 11.6 m² gross per person (125 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: high (80-200+ MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: often requires Type I or II construction for multi-story;
sprinklers per IBC 903.2.4 when area exceeds threshold
F-2: Factory Industrial Low-Hazard
- Examples: beverage bottling, brick manufacturing, ceramic production, foundries,
glass products, metal fabrication (noncombustible)
- Occupant load factor: 11.6 m² gross per person (125 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: low to moderate (20-60 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: most permissive industrial classification; noncombustible
materials in process reduce fire load
Group H -- High-Hazard
Buildings containing materials that pose a physical or health hazard beyond
exempt quantities per IFC Table 307.1(1) and 307.1(2).
H-1: Detonation hazard
- Materials: explosives, organic peroxides (unclassified detonable)
- Key code requirements: detached building, minimum setback distances per
quantity-distance tables, blast-resistant construction
H-2: Deflagration or accelerated burning hazard
- Materials: flammable gases, flammable/combustible liquids (Class I-A, I-B, I-C),
organic peroxides (Class I), oxidizers (Class 4)
- Key code requirements: explosion venting, mechanical ventilation, automatic
sprinklers, max 1-story for some uses
H-3: Physical hazard materials not in H-1 or H-2
- Materials: combustible fiber, flammable solids, consumer fireworks (1.4G),
oxidizers (Class 1-3)
- Key code requirements: sprinklers, separation from other occupancies
H-4: Health hazard materials
- Materials: corrosives, highly toxic materials, toxic materials
- Key code requirements: continuous ventilation, emergency alarm,
spill containment
H-5: Semiconductor fabrication and similar
- Materials: HPM (hazardous production materials) in semiconductor fabs
- Key code requirements: HPM storage and handling per IFC Chapter 27,
continuous gas monitoring, emergency ventilation
Group I -- Institutional
Buildings where occupants are under restraint or incapable of self-preservation.
I-1: Condition 1, supervised residential (more than 16 persons)
- Examples: assisted living, group homes (> 16), halfway houses, residential
board and care
- Occupant load factor: 18.6 m² gross per person (200 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: moderate (40-60 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: NFPA 13 sprinklers required, manual fire alarm,
smoke detection in sleeping rooms and corridors
I-2: Medical care / 24-hour supervision (more than 5 persons)
- Examples: hospitals, nursing homes, psychiatric facilities, detoxification
- Occupant load factor: 22.3 m² gross per person (240 ft² gross) inpatient
- Typical fire load: moderate (40-80 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: defend-in-place strategy, smoke compartments max
2090 m² (22,500 ft²), 2-hour fire-rated corridors in some jurisdictions,
1-hour corridor per IBC Table 1020.1, automatic sprinklers required
I-3: Restrained occupancy
- Examples: prisons, jails, reformatories, detention centers
- Occupant load factor: 11.1 m² gross per person (120 ft² gross)
- Conditions 1-5 based on degree of restraint
- Key code requirements: staff-release smoke detection, remote locking,
defend-in-place with smoke compartments
I-4: Day care (more than 5 persons of any age)
- Examples: adult day care, child care for children under 2.5 years
- Occupant load factor: 3.3 m² net per person (35 ft² net)
- Key code requirements: if above or below level of exit discharge,
classified as I-4; otherwise may be E or I-4 depending on occupants
Group M -- Mercantile
Buildings for display and sale of merchandise.
- Examples: department stores, retail shops, drug stores, markets, gas stations,
motor fuel-dispensing facilities
- Occupant load factor: 2.8 m² gross per person (30 ft² gross) for ground floor
and basement; 5.6 m² gross (60 ft²) for upper floors
- Typical fire load: moderate to high (50-150 MJ/m²) depending on stock
- Key code requirements: sprinklers when fire area > 1115 m² (12,000 ft²);
high-piled combustible storage (IFC Chapter 32) when stock > 3.7 m (12 ft)
Group R -- Residential
Buildings providing sleeping accommodations (not I group).
R-1: Transient (stays < 30 days)
- Examples: hotels, motels, boarding houses (transient)
- Occupant load factor: 18.6 m² gross per person (200 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: moderate (30-60 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: automatic sprinklers (NFPA 13), single-station
smoke alarms in each sleeping room + corridor, manual fire alarm
R-2: Permanent (stays >= 30 days, more than 2 dwelling units)
- Examples: apartment buildings, condominiums, dormitories, monasteries
- Occupant load factor: 18.6 m² gross per person (200 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: moderate (40-80 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: NFPA 13 or 13R sprinklers (13R permitted for
buildings up to 4 stories per NFPA 13R scope), interconnected smoke alarms
in each unit, fire alarm when > 16 units
R-3: One- and two-family dwellings and townhouses
- Examples: single-family houses, duplexes, townhouses (max 3 stories),
adult/child care for <= 5 persons, congregate living <= 16
- Occupant load factor: 18.6 m² gross per person (200 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: moderate (40-80 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: IRC (International Residential Code) may be used
instead of IBC; NFPA 13D residential sprinklers in many jurisdictions
R-4: Residential care/assisted living (5-16 persons)
- Examples: small group homes, small assisted living, alcohol/drug recovery
- Occupant load factor: 18.6 m² gross per person (200 ft² gross)
- Key code requirements: Condition 1 (ambulatory) or Condition 2 (non-ambulatory);
Condition 2 requires conformance with I-1 or I-2 provisions
Group S -- Storage
Buildings for storage not classified as hazardous.
S-1: Storage Moderate-Hazard
- Examples: furniture storage, tire storage, mattress storage, motor vehicle
repair garages, aircraft hangars (repair/storage)
- Occupant load factor: 27.9 m² gross per person (300 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: high (80-200+ MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: sprinklers when fire area > 1115 m² (12,000 ft²);
repair garages require mechanical ventilation per IMC
S-2: Storage Low-Hazard
- Examples: parking garages, aircraft hangars (storage only), noncombustible
material storage (metal, stone, glass)
- Occupant load factor: 27.9 m² gross per person (300 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: low to moderate (10-40 MJ/m²)
- Key code requirements: open parking garages (IBC 406.5) get significant
height/area increases; enclosed garages require CO detection
Group U -- Utility and Miscellaneous
Buildings not classified in any other group.
- Examples: agricultural buildings, carports, fences > 1.8 m (6 ft), retaining
walls, tanks, towers, barns, greenhouses, sheds
- Occupant load factor: 27.9 m² gross per person (300 ft² gross)
- Typical fire load: variable
- Key code requirements: agricultural buildings exempt from many IBC provisions
per IBC 312; private garages classified U if not S-2
Section 2: Construction Types
The IBC defines 5 construction types (I through V) with two subcategories each
(A and B), for a total of 10 classifications. Additionally, the 2021 IBC introduced
Type IV subcategories for mass timber. Construction type determines fire resistance
ratings for structural elements and, combined with occupancy, sets height and area
limits.
Type I -- Noncombustible
The most fire-resistive construction. All structural elements are noncombustible.
Type IA
- Structural frame: 3-hour fire resistance rating (FRR)
- Bearing walls (exterior): 3-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (interior): 3-hour FRR
- Floor construction: 2-hour FRR
- Roof construction: 1.5-hour FRR
- Typical materials: reinforced concrete, protected steel
- Applications: high-rise buildings, hospitals, large assembly
Type IB
- Structural frame: 2-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (exterior): 2-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (interior): 2-hour FRR
- Floor construction: 2-hour FRR
- Roof construction: 1-hour FRR
- Typical materials: reinforced concrete, protected steel
- Applications: mid-rise to high-rise office, residential, institutional
Type II -- Noncombustible (reduced ratings)
Structural elements are noncombustible but with lower or no fire resistance ratings.
Type IIA
- Structural frame: 1-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (exterior): 1-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (interior): 1-hour FRR
- Floor construction: 1-hour FRR
- Roof construction: 1-hour FRR
- Typical materials: protected steel, light-gauge steel framing with gypsum
- Applications: mid-rise office, retail, educational
Type IIB
- Structural frame: 0-hour FRR (noncombustible, unprotected)
- Bearing walls (exterior): 0-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (interior): 0-hour FRR
- Floor construction: 0-hour FRR
- Roof construction: 0-hour FRR
- Typical materials: unprotected steel, metal deck
- Applications: warehouses, single-story commercial, big-box retail
Type III -- Exterior Noncombustible, Interior Any
Exterior walls are noncombustible; interior structure may be combustible.
Type IIIA
- Structural frame: 1-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (exterior): 2-hour FRR (noncombustible)
- Bearing walls (interior): 1-hour FRR
- Floor construction: 1-hour FRR
- Roof construction: 1-hour FRR
- Typical materials: masonry/concrete exterior, wood-frame interior with
gypsum protection
- Applications: 3-5 story residential (apartments, hotels), mixed-use podium
Type IIIB
- Structural frame: 0-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (exterior): 2-hour FRR (noncombustible)
- Bearing walls (interior): 0-hour FRR
- Floor construction: 0-hour FRR
- Roof construction: 0-hour FRR
- Typical materials: masonry exterior, unprotected wood interior
- Applications: low-rise mixed-use, retail with residential above
Type IV -- Heavy Timber and Mass Timber
Type IV (Legacy Heavy Timber, now Type IV-HT)
- Structural frame: heavy timber (HT) -- min dimensions per IBC 602.4
(columns min 203 mm / 8 in, beams min 152 x 203 mm / 6 x 8 in)
- Bearing walls (exterior): 2-hour FRR (noncombustible)
- Floor construction: heavy timber (min 76 mm / 3 in thick)
- Roof construction: heavy timber (min 51 mm / 2 in thick)
- No concealed spaces permitted
Type IV-A (Mass Timber, highest protection)
- Structural frame: 3-hour FRR (mass timber fully encapsulated with
noncombustible protection)
- Floor/roof: 2-hour FRR (encapsulated)
- All mass timber surfaces covered by noncombustible protection (typically
2 layers of 16 mm Type X gypsum board)
- Maximum 18 stories per IBC (2021+)
Type IV-B (Mass Timber, partial exposure)
- Structural frame: 2-hour FRR
- Floor/roof: 2-hour FRR
- Limited exposed mass timber permitted: up to 20% of ceiling area,
40% of walls (noncombustible protection on remainder)
- Maximum 12 stories per IBC (2021+)
Type IV-C (Mass Timber, exposed)
- Structural frame: 2-hour FRR
- Floor/roof: 2-hour FRR
- Mass timber may be fully exposed (no required noncombustible covering)
- Maximum 9 stories per IBC (2021+)
- Fire resistance achieved by oversizing timber members beyond structural
requirements to account for charring
Type V -- Combustible
Wood-frame or other combustible construction.
Type VA
- Structural frame: 1-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (exterior): 1-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (interior): 1-hour FRR
- Floor construction: 1-hour FRR
- Roof construction: 1-hour FRR
- Typical materials: wood-frame with gypsum board enclosure
- Applications: 3-5 story residential (with podium), townhouses,
small commercial
Type VB
- Structural frame: 0-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (exterior): 0-hour FRR
- Bearing walls (interior): 0-hour FRR
- Floor construction: 0-hour FRR
- Roof construction: 0-hour FRR
- Typical materials: unprotected wood-frame
- Applications: 1-2 story houses, small commercial, agricultural
Height and Area by Construction Type (IBC Table 504.3/504.4 Summary)
Selected maximum heights (stories / feet) and areas (ft² per floor) for
sprinklered buildings:
| Occupancy | Type IA | Type IB | Type IIA | Type IIB | Type IIIA | Type VA | Type VB |
|---|
| A-2 | UL/UL | 12/180 | 12/85 | 12/75 | 12/85 | 4/70 | 2/40 |
| B | UL/UL | 12/180 | 12/85 | 12/75 | 12/85 | 4/70 | 2/40 |
| R-2 | UL/UL | 12/180 | 12/85 | 12/75 | 12/85 | 4/70 | 3/50 |
| S-1 | UL/UL | 12/180 | 6/79 | 4/48 | 5/48 | 4/39 | 2/26 |
(UL = Unlimited. All areas shown in thousands of ft². Height in stories/feet.
Values are with sprinkler increase per IBC 504.2. Actual project values must be
verified against IBC Table 504.3, 504.4, and 506.2.)
Section 3: Height and Area Limitations
Calculating Allowable Height
IBC controls height two ways:
- Allowable stories above grade plane (IBC Table 504.4)
- Allowable building height in feet/meters (IBC Table 504.3)
Both must be satisfied. The more restrictive governs.
Sprinkler height increase (IBC 504.2):
- An NFPA 13 sprinkler system adds 6.1 m (20 ft) to allowable height
- Adds 1 story to allowable stories (except for certain H and I occupancies)
- Type IB and higher with Group B, M, or S-2: unlimited height when sprinklered
Calculating Allowable Area
Base allowable area per floor is given by IBC Table 506.2 based on occupancy
and construction type.
Frontage increase (If):
If = [F/P - 0.25] × 100 / 0.75
Where:
- F = building perimeter fronting on public way or open space > 6.1 m (20 ft) wide
- P = total building perimeter
- Maximum If = 75%
- Minimum F/P = 0.25 (no increase below this)
Sprinkler increase (Is):
- Multi-story: Is = 200% (area triples) for NFPA 13 system
- Single-story: Is = 300% (area quadruples) for NFPA 13 system
Allowable area per floor (Aa):
Aa = At + [At × If / 100] + [At × Is / 100]
Where At = tabular area from Table 506.2
Allowable total building area:
Total = Aa × number of stories (up to 3 stories)
For buildings > 3 stories, total area is not limited per floor but overall
building footprint is governed by Aa.
Unlimited Area Buildings (IBC 507)
A building may have unlimited area when ALL of the following are met:
- Single story (one story above grade plane)
- NFPA 13 sprinkler system throughout
- Construction type and occupancy per the following:
- Type I or IIA: Groups A, B, E, F, H (limited), M, S
- Type IIIA or IV: Groups B, F, M, S (with 18.3 m / 60 ft setback all sides)
- Type IIA: Group A-4 (open air) without sprinkler requirement
- Perimeter access: 18.3 m (60 ft) minimum setback from lot lines on all
sides, or public way frontage for fire department access
These provisions enable large-footprint buildings: convention centers, big-box
retail, warehouses, aircraft hangars, manufacturing plants.
Section 4: Means of Egress
Means of egress is the continuous and unobstructed path of travel from any occupied
point in a building to a public way. It consists of three components.
Three Components
-
Exit Access -- the path from any occupied point to an exit. Includes
rooms, corridors, aisles, ramps, and unenclosed stairs within exit access.
Not fire-rated (except corridor requirements per Table 1020.1).
-
Exit -- the fire-rated portion separating exit access from exit discharge.
Includes:
- Interior exit stairways (enclosed stairs)
- Interior exit ramps
- Exit passageways (horizontal fire-rated corridors connecting stairs to
exit discharge)
- Horizontal exits (fire wall with fire doors allowing passage to adjacent
fire compartment)
-
Exit Discharge -- the path from the exit to the public way. Includes
exterior exit doors, vestibules, exit courts, exterior stairs. Max 50%
of exits may discharge through the level of exit discharge (ground floor)
if sprinklered and path through ground floor is protected.
Number of Exits Required (IBC Table 1006.2.1)
| Occupant Load | Minimum Exits |
|---|
| 1-500 | 2 |
| 501-1,000 | 3 |
| > 1,000 | 4 |
Exception for single exit: Certain occupancies with small occupant loads
and short travel distances may have a single exit per IBC Table 1006.2.1:
- Group B: max 49 occupants, max travel distance 23 m (75 ft), max 1 story
- Group R-2: max 4 dwelling units per floor, max travel distance 38 m (125 ft)
sprinklered
Travel Distance (IBC Table 1017.2)
Maximum travel distance from the most remote point to the nearest exit:
| Occupancy | Unsprinklered | Sprinklered |
|---|
| A | 61 m (200 ft) | 76 m (250 ft) |
| B | 61 m (200 ft) | 91 m (300 ft) |
| E | 61 m (200 ft) | 76 m (250 ft) |
| F-1 | 61 m (200 ft) | 76 m (250 ft) |
| H-1 | 23 m (75 ft) | 23 m (75 ft) |
| H-2 | 23 m (75 ft) | 30 m (100 ft) |
| H-3 | NP | 30 m (100 ft) |
| I-1 | 61 m (200 ft) | 76 m (250 ft) |
| I-2 | NP | 61 m (200 ft) |
| M | 61 m (200 ft) | 76 m (250 ft) |
| R | 61 m (200 ft) | 76 m (250 ft) |
| S-1 | 61 m (200 ft) | 76 m (250 ft) |
| S-2 | 91 m (300 ft) | 122 m (400 ft) |
| U | 61 m (200 ft) | 76 m (250 ft) |
(NP = not permitted without sprinklers)
Common Path of Egress Travel
The portion of exit access that must be traversed before two separate paths to
two exits become available:
- General: 23 m (75 ft)
- Groups B, F, S (sprinklered): 30 m (100 ft)
- Group R (sprinklered): 38 m (125 ft)
- Groups I-1, I-2: 15 m (50 ft)
Dead-End Corridors
- General: 6.1 m (20 ft) maximum dead-end corridor
- Sprinklered B, F-1, S-1: 15 m (50 ft)
- Groups I-2, I-3: 6.1 m (20 ft), no increase
Exit Width Calculation
Stairways:
- 7.6 mm (0.3 in) per occupant served
- Minimum stair width: 1118 mm (44 in) for occupant load >= 50;
914 mm (36 in) for < 50
Level components (doors, corridors, ramps):
- 5.1 mm (0.2 in) per occupant served
- Minimum corridor width: 1118 mm (44 in) general; 1829 mm (72 in)
for I-2 corridors; 2438 mm (96 in) for E corridors
Example: 600 occupants, 2 stairs:
- Each stair serves 300 occupants (at minimum; balanced loading)
- Stair width = 300 × 7.6 mm = 2,280 mm required
- Provide 2,300 mm (or two 1,150 mm stairs is insufficient -- each must
be 2,280 mm? No -- total capacity across all exits must accommodate
total occupant load, with largest single exit excluded)
- IBC 1005.1: with any one exit blocked, remaining exits must handle
total load. With 2 exits, each must handle 100% of load
- Revised: each stair = 600 × 7.6 mm = 4,560 mm? No -- each stair
handles 50%, but IBC requires total minus largest single exit
- Correct application: 2 exits, each 50% = 300 occupants per stair
= 300 × 7.6 = 2,280 mm per stair
(Note: The convergence factor and actual calculation method should be verified
against the specific IBC edition adopted by the jurisdiction.)
European Comparison (EN/BS)
- EN standard stair width: 1,100 mm minimum (BS 9999: 1,050 mm minimum
for up to 150 persons per floor)
- Travel distance measured differently: actual walking distance along
shortest route vs. IBC straight-line method
Section 5: Fire Separation Requirements
Types of Fire-Rated Construction
Fire Wall (IBC 706):
- Structural independence (self-supporting, remains standing if structure
on either side collapses)
- Creates separate buildings for height/area calculations
- Rating: 2 hr (R, B, E, M) to 4 hr (H, F-1, S-1)
Fire Barrier (IBC 707):
- Continuous from floor to underside of floor/roof above (or through roof)
- Used for: occupancy separation, exit enclosures, incidental use separation,
shaft enclosures, horizontal exits
- Rating: per table requirements (typically 1-2 hr)
Fire Partition (IBC 708):
- May terminate at underside of fire-rated floor/ceiling or roof/ceiling
assembly above
- Used for: dwelling unit separation, sleeping unit separation, corridor walls
- Rating: typically 1 hr (0.5 hr for corridor in some sprinklered conditions)
Smoke Barrier (IBC 709):
- Continuous membrane from outside wall to outside wall or floor to floor
- Used for: I-2 smoke compartments, I-3 smoke compartments
- Rating: 1 hr minimum, with smoke-tight construction
Occupancy Separation (IBC Table 508.4)
When different occupancies share a building using the separated occupancy method:
| Adjacent Occupancies | Separation (hr) S / NS |
|---|
| A, B, E, M, R, S / A, B, E, M, R, S | 1 / 2 |
| A, B, E, M, R, S / F-1, S-1 | 1 / 2 |
| A, B, E, M, R, S / H-1 | NP / NP |
| A, B, E, M, R, S / H-2 | 2 / 3 |
| A, B, E, M, R, S / H-3, H-4, H-5 | 1 / 2 |
| A, B, E, M, R, S / I-1, I-3, I-4 | 1 / 2 |
| A, B, E, M, R, S / I-2 | 2 / NP |
| H-1 / any | NP / NP |
(S = sprinklered, NS = nonsprinklered, NP = not permitted)
Shaft Enclosures (IBC 713)
- Shafts connecting 4 or fewer stories: 1-hour fire barrier
- Shafts connecting more than 4 stories: 2-hour fire barrier
- Applies to: elevator shafts, mechanical shafts, stairways, garbage chutes,
laundry chutes, duct shafts
Corridor Fire Rating (IBC Table 1020.1)
| Occupancy | Sprinklered | Nonsprinklered |
|---|
| H-1, H-2, H-3 | 1 hr | 1 hr |
| H-4, H-5 | 1 hr | 1 hr |
| I-2 | 0 hr* | NP |
| I-1, I-3 | 0 hr* | 1 hr |
| A, B, E, F, M, S, U | 0 hr | 1 hr |
| R | 0.5 hr | 1 hr |
(*Corridor walls in I occupancies are often required by other sections to be
smoke partitions regardless of Table 1020.1 rating.)
Section 6: Plumbing Fixtures
Minimum Plumbing Fixture Requirements (IBC Table 2902.1 / IPC Table 403.1)
Minimum number of fixtures per occupant by occupancy group:
Assembly (A):
- Water closets: 1 per 125 males / 1 per 65 females
- Lavatories: 1 per 200 persons
- Drinking fountains: 1 per 500 persons
- Service sinks: 1 per building
Business (B):
- Water closets: 1 per 25 males / 1 per 25 females (up to 50 occupants);
additional per larger counts
- Lavatories: 1 per 40 persons
- Drinking fountains: 1 per 100 persons
- Service sinks: 1 per building
Educational (E):
- Water closets: 1 per 50 males / 1 per 50 females
- Lavatories: 1 per 50 persons
- Drinking fountains: 1 per 100 persons
Mercantile (M):
- Water closets: 1 per 500 males / 1 per 750 females (per code cycle --
verify current edition)
- Customer facilities required when floor area > 929 m² (10,000 ft²)
Residential (R-1, R-2):
- 1 water closet, 1 lavatory, 1 bathtub/shower per dwelling unit or
guest room
- Drinking fountains: 0 (private units)
Industrial / Factory (F):
- Water closets: 1 per 100 males / 1 per 100 females
- Lavatories: 1 per 100 persons
- Drinking fountains: 1 per 400 persons
Institutional (I):
- Varies by condition: I-2 requires accessible patient bathing and toilet
facilities per occupant ratios defined by licensing authorities
- Typically 1 WC per patient room in hospitals
Gender-Neutral / All-User Toilet Provisions
Current code trends (2021 IBC and later amendments):
- Single-occupant toilet rooms may be designated for use by any gender
- Multi-stall all-gender restrooms addressed in some jurisdictions
- Fixture count may be combined when using all-gender single-occupant rooms
Section 7: International Code Comparison
IBC (United States)
- Scope: Model code adopted by all 50 states (with local amendments)
- Height limits: Set by construction type and occupancy per prescriptive tables
- Fire resistance: Prescriptive fire resistance ratings per construction type
(Tables 601, 602)
- Accessibility: ICC A117.1 referenced; ADA/ABA standards enforced federally
- Energy: IECC (International Energy Conservation Code) or ASHRAE 90.1
Building Regulations (England & Wales)
- Scope: Statutory Instruments enforced through Approved Documents A-S
- Height limits: No prescriptive height/area table; fire strategy and structural
design govern feasibility. Approved Document B provides guidance by "purpose group"
(equivalent to occupancy)
- Fire resistance: Approved Document B, Volume 1 (dwellings) and Volume 2
(other buildings). Fire resistance periods: 30 min (up to 5 m height), 60 min
(up to 18 m), 90 min (up to 30 m), 120 min (over 30 m). Post-Grenfell:
combustible material ban above 18 m (Building Safety Act 2022)
- Accessibility: Approved Document M (Volume 1: dwellings, Volume 2: other
buildings). Category M4(2) accessible and adaptable dwellings; M4(3) wheelchair
user dwellings
- Energy: Approved Document L; Part L 2021 uplift targets ~31% CO2 reduction
over 2013 standards; Future Homes Standard 2025 targeting 75-80% reduction
Eurocodes + National Annexes
- Scope: Structural design standards (EN 1990-1999) adopted across EU/EEA
with nationally determined parameters (NDPs)
- Height limits: Not addressed by Eurocodes; governed by national building
regulations (e.g., Germany: Landesbauordnung, France: Code de la Construction)
- Fire resistance: EN 1991-1-2 (fire actions), EN 1992-1-2 through
EN 1996-1-2 (material-specific fire design). Parametric fire curves as
alternative to standard fire
- Accessibility: EN 17210 (accessibility and usability of the built
environment) published 2021; implementation varies by member state
- Energy: EPBD (Energy Performance of Buildings Directive); nearly zero-energy
building (nZEB) requirements since 2021 for all new buildings
NCC (National Construction Code, Australia)
- Scope: Building Code of Australia (BCA) forms Volume 1 and 2 of NCC
- Height limits: Determined by building classification (Class 1-10) and
type of construction (A, B, C corresponding roughly to IBC Types I, III, V).
Rise in storeys and floor area per Table C1.1
- Fire resistance: NCC Volume 1 Specification C1.1; fire resistance levels (FRL)
expressed as structural adequacy / integrity / insulation in minutes
(e.g., 120/120/120)
- Accessibility: NCC Section D (Access and Egress) + AS 1428.1 (Design for
Access and Mobility, General Requirements)
- Energy: NCC Section J (Energy Efficiency); NatHERS for residential
NBC (National Building Code, Canada)
- Scope: Model code published by NRC; adopted by provinces with modifications
- Height limits: Part 3 Table 3.2.2.A (building area and height based on
major occupancy and construction type: noncombustible vs combustible)
- Fire resistance: Part 3 Subsection 3.2.2; fire-resistance ratings by
building use and height. Combustible construction limited to 6 storeys
(recent amendments allow up to 12 for mass timber in some provinces)
- Accessibility: CSA B651 (Accessible Design for the Built Environment);
NBC Part 3 Section 3.8 (Barrier-Free Design)
- Energy: NECB (National Energy Code for Buildings) 2020; tiered energy
performance targets
Key Comparative Observations
-
Prescriptive vs performance: IBC and NBC use prescriptive tables for
height/area. UK and Australian codes allow performance-based fire engineering
as a standard path, enabling designs exceeding prescriptive limits with
adequate justification.
-
Fire resistance philosophy: IBC rates individual assemblies. UK and
Eurocodes focus on whole-building fire strategy with insulation, integrity,
and load-bearing criteria assessed separately.
-
Accessibility scope: ADA focuses on public accommodations and commercial
facilities. UK Part M applies to all new buildings including dwellings.
Australia AS 1428.1 is among the most stringent for public buildings.
-
Energy trajectory: All jurisdictions are converging toward near-zero
energy new construction by 2030. UK's Future Homes Standard (2025) and EU's
EPBD recast (2024) lead with most aggressive targets.
-
Mass timber: IBC 2021 introduced Type IV-A/B/C for tall mass timber.
NBC allows up to 12 stories in some provinces. UK has no prescriptive tall
timber path but performance-based approaches have enabled projects up to
10 stories. Australia NCC 2019 introduced provisions for mass timber up to
25 m effective height.
This skill provides general code guidance for architectural decision-making.
All code interpretations must be verified against the specific edition adopted
by the authority having jurisdiction (AHJ). Building officials have final
authority on code compliance.