IBC/IFC are not adopted by the state, they are not applicable or enforceable, 
only the LSC.  This is not a unique condition across the US.

For construction, it’s up to the owner and contractor to decide what code if 
any they intend to follow.  Most will follow the IBC as a recognized standard 
but they are not required to adhere to every aspect of it if they determine it 
has no benefit since it’s not a mandatory Code.




Craig L. Prahl
Fire Protection Group Lead/SME
CH2M
200 Verdae Blvd.
Greenville, SC  29607
Direct - 864.920.7540
Fax - 864.920.7129
CH2MHILL Extension  77540
[email protected]


From: Sprinklerforum [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of rongreenman .
Sent: Thursday, July 28, 2016 9:48 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Installing non-required systems [EXTERNAL]

No building code is the kicker here. Where ICC gives you IBC, IRC & IFC as the 
basic building code/safety code/maintenance code grouping NFPA gives you 1, 101 
& 5000. What do they use in this secret location as a building code for stuff 
not necessarily life safety? Does every little structure need to be fully 
engineered?

On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 5:45 AM, 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Well here’s the kicker, since the LSC is the prevailing Building Code and the 
LSC does not require sprinklers, NFPA 13 is irrelevant as far as mandatory 
compliance.  Also in this part of the country State law allows the owner to act 
as the AHJ on their property if there is no local municipal AHJ. Do you see why 
I’m having so much fun with this one?

13 doesn’t direct what occupancies get sprinklered, that’s the building or fire 
code or in this case the Life Safety Code.  The LSC allows the occupancy in 
question to be constructed with no sprinkler requirement.  My guess is that 
this was an internal Safety Group directive by someone who felt sprinklers 
would be beneficial in the warehouse part of the building only but who also had 
no real knowledge of installations or requirements and the contractor just did 
as he was asked.  There is no documentation and no one on the site from when 
this work was done.

So the best I can come up with are recommendations for their consideration but 
they are not constrained by any laws or codes to take any of the 
recommendations.

Personally I do love the fact that this is an area where you are not 
constrained by a million laws regulating every aspect of your life but from a 
code study and analysis standpoint, it creates a real challenge.

Thanks to all for the ideas, thoughts and recommendations,

Craig L. Prahl
Fire Protection Group Lead/SME
CH2M
200 Verdae Blvd.
Greenville, SC  29607
Direct - 864.920.7540<tel:864.920.7540>
Fax - 864.920.7129<tel:864.920.7129>
CH2MHILL Extension  77540
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

From: Sprinklerforum 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
 On Behalf Of rongreenman .
Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2016 7:28 PM
To: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Installing non-required systems [EXTERNAL]

I think your path would be where 13 specifies all areas must be sprinklers 
unless specifically omitted. So you have the areas you would normally exclude 
if they meet the specified criteria in 13 or if the jurisdiction has a specific 
ordinance allowing you leave an area unprotected. Seattle used to have a life 
safety provision for retrofit of hotels and group homes where you just 
sprinklered the hllls and ran a head into each unit over the door.


On Wednesday, July 27, 2016, Parsley Consulting 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Craig,
    I don't know where that exists, however my concern would be that you'll 
still need to establish a standard for design, including coverage areas, 
calculations, materials, and on and on.  I haven't done anything like that in 
more than a decade so I'd be interested to see what you come up with.
Ken Wagoner, SET
Parsley Consulting
350 West 9th Avenue, Suite 206
Escondido, California 92025
Phone 760-745-6181<tel:760-745-6181>
Visit our website<http://www.parsleyconsulting.com/>
On 07/27/2016 2:58 PM, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> wrote:
Somewhere within NFPA 13 I recall seeing a statement which says basically that 
if you install a system voluntarily (not required by Code) it must still be 
installed per the NFPA Standard.

Anyone know where that is, I’ve hunted all over and can’t find it within either 
the 2010 or 2013 NFPA 13 editions.


Craig L. Prahl
Fire Protection Group Lead/SME
CH2M
200 Verdae Blvd.
Greenville, SC  29607
Direct - 864.920.7540<tel:864.920.7540>
Fax - 864.920.7129<tel:864.920.7129>
CH2MHILL Extension  77540
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>


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