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CC Work Session <br />Meeting Date: 01/10/2012 <br />By: Tim Gladhill, Community Development <br />Title: <br />Review Building Code Options for Fire Suppression <br />2.5. <br />Background: <br />At the December 6, 2011 City Council Work Session, the City Council discussed the provisions of the Minnesota <br />State Building Code as it relates to fire suppression/sprinklers. The City Council discussed the optional provisions <br />of the Building Code, including Chapter 1306 entitled Special Fire Protection Systems. The City Council directed <br />staff to prepare a cost analysis of construction costs associated with and without requirements of Chapter 1306. If <br />the City Council decides to repeal Chapter 1306, Chapter 9 of the International Building Code would still include <br />fire suppression provisions. <br />At the same Work Session, the City Council directed Staff to review the legality of issuance of Interim Use Permits <br />(IUP), a zoning tool afforded to cities in Minnesota by Minnesota Statute Chapter 462. <br />Notification: <br />No notification required. <br />Observations: <br />The State of Minnesota has adopted the International Building Code as part of the State Building Code. The State <br />of Minnesota requires that the City adopt the State Building Code, which requires certain required and optional <br />chapters. Within the state building code, buildings meeting certain limitations must incorporate fire suppression <br />systems. This threshold is different for types of uses, occupant loads, building construction types or building heights <br />above or below grade. Architects may at times have an option to build fire walls in -lieu -of fire suppression. This <br />option is not always available due to tenant space needs or other specific code requirements. <br />As noted before, Chapter 1306 of the Building Code is an optional chapter of the Building Code. However, the <br />required sections of Building Code the City must adopt do include provisions for fire suppression even without the <br />adoption of Chapter 1306. Chapter 1306 reduces the thresholds where fire suppression is required within buildings <br />or tenant spaces. All 'A' type spaces and almost all other occupancy types have 2,000 square feet or more are <br />required to have suppression under Chapter 1306. <br />Chapter 9 does include requirements for existing buildings, with certain increases in occupant load triggering the <br />need for existing structures to install fire suppression. As an example, Hope Fellowship would need to have fire <br />suppression due to the fact it is an 'A-3' type assembly under Chapter 1306. If Chapter 1306 was not adopted, the <br />tenant space would still be evaluated during plan review. In this case, fire suppression would still be required per the <br />Building Code due to occupant load. Chapter 9 sets thresholds where fire suppression is automatically required. <br />Spaces classified as Class 'A-3' need fire suppression if any of the following applies: <br />1. The fire area square footage is over 12,000 square feet <br />2. The occupant load is over 300 occupants <br />3. The structure is more than one story in height. <br />Hope Fellowship's occupant load is over 700. This is a case where the tenant needs would not allow for fire walls <br />in lieu of fire suppression. The worship space would need to be cut by approximately 50% with a fire wall to make <br />it meet Building Code requirements and not require fire suppression. <br />To address the City Council's desire to review the difference in cost between fire suppression or other methods of <br />