{"id":23487,"date":"2017-09-21T04:47:18","date_gmt":"2017-09-21T11:47:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/safti.com\/?post_type=articles&p=12017"},"modified":"2023-05-16T16:04:52","modified_gmt":"2023-05-16T23:04:52","slug":"fire-door-requirements-and-sprinkler-exceptions","status":"publish","type":"articles","link":"https:\/\/safti.com\/articles\/fire-door-requirements-and-sprinkler-exceptions\/","title":{"rendered":"Fire Door Requirements and Sprinkler Exceptions"},"content":{"rendered":"

Fire Door Requirements and Sprinkler Exceptions<\/h1>\n

When the International Code Committee (ICC) published the revised Table 716.5 in the 2012 IBC<\/a> (formerly Table 715.4 in the 2009 IBC), the code community saw it as a significant step in clarifying the confusion around the glazing requirements for fire door assemblies. For the first time, the code clearly laid out the vision panel size limits for fire doors and added a column that specified the sidelite and transom rating requirements. These were not new changes, but rather a clarification of code requirements that were already in effect the 2006 and 2009 IBC and conform to what NFPA 80 provided in the 1999 and 2007 NFPA 80 editions.<\/p>\n

\n\n\n\n\n
\"Fire<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n
2-hour fire resistive stairwell with 90-minute full vision aluminum doors that meet all fire resistive and temperature rise requirements<\/em><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<\/div>\n

The 2012 IBC did contain one significant update. In the 2006 and 2009 IBC, the code provided for an exception to Section 715.4.4.1 (Glazing in Doors) that allowed fire protective glazing to exceed 100 sq. inches in door vision panels in fire doors used in exit enclosures and passageways when the building was fully sprinklered in accordance with Section 903.3.1.1 or 903.3.1.2. This exception was actually a result of an editorial error. When the vision panel language was added to the 2006 and 2009 IBC, the submitter never intended the sprinkler exception to apply to the vision panel glazing. This error was corrected with the exception being eliminated in the 2012 IBC (and in the 2015 IBC as well). This change meant that fire protective glazing will always be limited to 100 sq. inches in door vision panels in fire doors used in exit enclosures and passageways, regardless if the building is sprinklered in those jurisdictions that have adopted the 2012 IBC or later editions.<\/p>\n

Present-day Code Requirements<\/strong><\/p>\n

Currently about 80% of United States is on the 2012 or 2015 IBC, where sprinkler exemptions do not apply to the 100 sq. inch size limitation applied to fire protective glazing used in fire door vision panels in panels in fire doors used in exit enclosures and passageways. Because of this, it is important for architects and door manufacturers to review what the code requirements are.<\/p>\n

Below is an excerpt from Table 716.5 Opening Fire Protection Assemblies, Ratings and Markings in the 2012 IBC affecting fire doors in exit enclosures and passageways:<\/p>\n

\"Print\"<\/div>\n

According to the table, fire doors in 2 hour exit enclosures and exit passageways will have a minimum rating of 90 minutes. For 1 hour exit enclosures and exit passageways, the fire door will have a minimum rating of 60 minutes. In the column \u201cDoor Vision Panel Size\u201d, the glazing panel is 100 sq. inches in both cases.<\/p>\n

Also present in the \u201cDoor Vision Panel Size\u201d column are 2 important footnotes:<\/p>\n