by Jerry Peck - Codeman on Tue Nov 15, 2011 11:48 pm
Scott,
That's what I was saying, that wall you are showing as a 2-hour separation wall will need to be a full firewall and may need to be 2-hours or 3-hours, and the intent of that wall would not be to separate the two fire areas, but to separate the two halves into separate "buildings".
Only then can I see that you 'may' be able to get by with 1 egress exit for each "building", and each "building" must be able to stand alone structurally should the "building" on the other side of the firewall collapse.
That would be one of those calls which the AHJ would need to make, and same AHJ may give it to you and others AHJ may not.
The way to solve that problem is to actually separate those halves into separate buildings, i.e., construct two separate "exterior walls' which are fire-rated for the lack of physical separation between them. That way you have two separate buildings with, say, a 3 foot to 5 foot walkway between them. Yes, I know, this does not work with your modular plan, but it is a way to solve the problem.
My guess is that many AHJ will recognize a full firewall as creating two separate and distinct, but attached, "buildings", and that they will also recognize that you are doing that to avoid having to provide two separate egress exits for the one common structure - even though you have provided two separate egress exits, they are not accessible to the other part of the structure.
I believe you will have a harder time selling this to the local Fire Marshals than to the AHJ for the building structures.
I, for one, would have a hard time swallowing that plan as it is a deliberate attempt to get around providing two separate egress exits for the one structure.
And when there is an emergency and someone is injured or dies, you can count on one thing for sure - that they will come looking for you, with your name at the top of the "Defendants" list, because it was you who chose to try to get around the two accessible egress exits.
What I'm saying is that you may be able to get some AHJ, and a few Fire Marshals (but probably not many), to sign off on your plan, but at what cost? Especially when a simple revision would solve the problem.
You would not be able to have any utilities in that common firewall as each "building" would need to be able to stand alone. Think of it as being able to slice down that firewall as though you were cutting a loaf of bread and removing one half - the other half would need to be able to stand alone ... no common fire sprinklers, no common wiring, no common anything.
And, yes, to another question of yours: each stair would likely need to be the exit and would need to be contained within its own firewalls. If there is an exception which would allow this not to be a fully protected exit, I would not want to apply that exception - I would want to make sure that anyone escaping from a unit will be protected and safe within the stair enclosure all the way down to the exit discharge, which, by the way, should be opening outward in the direction of egress (the left one is shown as opening inward while the right one is shown as opening outward).
Just some thoughts off the top of my head.
Jerry Peck - CodeMan
AskCodeMan.com
Construction Litigation Consultant - Retired
Construction and Code Consultant - Semi Retired