We are building a 3 story (finished) elevated SFR with parking underneath that is located in a V-zone in the panhandle of FL. Elevation requirements vary, but all new coastal construction has to be BFE +3' in our area. The lot is zoned as AE-9 where the house is being placed, however because its within 200' of the sound, it is required to be built to V-zone requirements. We can not enclose, finish or make habitable areas on the lower level. We were told by the local BO that the house would be considered a Threshold Building and therefore subject to inspections, engineering, fire sprinklers and must be built by a CGC as a CBC can not build threshold buildings in FLA. They are saying this is 4 stories. Per the definition of "Threshold Building", we are under the height requirements and use/occupancy does not apply = so we are fighting the determination of number of stories. Therefore - we need to define story and story above grade. We also need to define Floor. Lowest floor is the first finished elevated floor.
Conditions:
House must be elevated 3' above BFE
Parking area underneath can not be enclosed
Concrete slab can not be structural, reinforced, must be frangible and saw cut between the concrete pilings to allow break-away
No footings, grade beams, spread-foundations or other support may be used for the slab
A portion of the parking area can be enclosed as per R322 for elevator/stairs/minimal storage
Design:
The House as designed will have lowest floor approx 14' above the required elevation
First Finished floor is about 11'6" above finished grade.
Parking area underneath will be 2' above the required BFE
Built on concrete pilings / ecospan floor trusses and 4.5 concrete slab = on all finished floor levels
Exterior walls are 12" ICF
The concern here stems from the definition of Grade Plane and Story Above Grade Plane. We know the defined words very well and have found in some codes, this relates specifically to basements but most others have the word basement removed. The "story above grade" plane refers to the average of 4 points where the grade adjoins the "exterior walls" = basement walls, stem wall, etc. Then further by the 6' and 12' rules. In the situation where the home is elevated, the grade does not adjoin the exterior walls as there are none and no supporting footers or grade beams or spread foundations are used. We don't think that this was written or intended for use in houses that have an elevation requirement and therefore could reduce the max 3 story SFR allowance to only be 2 finished floors (2 stories), or could push an existing home into the threshold condition and require sprinklers.
Now for the fun part. After being told this was a threshold building by the local BO, and therefore required to be built under "building code" and not "residential", we started reaching out to other local BO's. We got different answers from almost all of them. Our county said Threshold, the beach agency said 3 story elevated over parking (not threshold), 2 counties east said the same - not threshold as long as it is not enclosed except as allowed for by R322. 1 county to the west said - get this - "if the elevation is over 7' to first finished floor, the lower level is considered a story" (what would someone do with 7' for parking?)
So in the wise kingdom here, is there any work-around to get / determine that the lower level is exempt from being considered a story? (making the assumption that the house is "required" to be elevated and the lower level can not finished)