34 Pa. Code § 50.1 - Occupancy groups
(a)
Class of building. The Department will classify each building
into one or more of the following occupancy groups according to the building
use and the characteristics of the occupants.
(b)
Group A-Assembly.
Buildings primarily used or designed for the purpose of assembly of persons for
amusement, entertainment, worship, transportation, recreation, sports, military
drilling, dining or similar purposes shall be classified as Group A-Assembly
Occupancies. Group A is divided into the following division:
| Division | Capacity |
| A-1 (Chapter 51) | 501 or more |
| A-2 (Chapter 52) | 101 thru 500 |
| A-3 (Chapter 53) | 4 thru 100 |
(c)
Group B-Educational. Buildings primarily used or designed for
the purpose of education or instruction shall be classified as Group
B-Educational Occupancies. Schools for business or vocational training shall be
classified in the same occupancies and conform to the same requirements as the
trade, vocation or business being taught. Nursery schools, day care centers,
group day care homes and the like shall be classified as B occupancies.
However, they may be housed in a building which has an A, C-1 or C-2 occupancy
permit without submission of plans or approval as a B occupancy. Group day care
homes and family day care homes may use the C-3 regulations for occupancies of
eight or less children without a B occupancy approval. See Chapter 54 (relating
to Group B-Educational).
(d)
Group C-Group habitation . Buildings primarily used or
designed for the purpose of habitation by four or more persons shall be
classified as Group C-Group Habitation. Group C is divided into the following
divisions:
(1)
Division C-1.
Health care institutions include buildings that provide sleeping facilities for
four or more persons who are mostly incapable of self-preservation because of
physical or mental illness or disease, or persons convalescing from physical or
mental illness or disease. Hospitals, sanitariums, nursing homes, convalescent
homes, rest homes, and the like shall be classified as health care
institutions. Personal care homes licensed by the Department of Public Welfare
will not be considered health care institutions. Health care institutions shall
comply with the following:
(i) Health care
institutions which have plans approved by the Department after May 19, 1986,
shall comply with NFPA-101, Life Safety Code, 1985 Edition published by the
National Fire Protection Association, Batterymarch Park, Quincy, Massachusetts
02269.
(ii) Health care
institutions or portions of health care institutions which have had plans
approved by the Department from June 1, 1976, to May 19, 1986, shall be
considered in compliance with this chapter as long as compliance is maintained
in accordance with the provisions in force on the date of approval by the
Department.
(iii) Health care
institutions or portions of health care institutions which complied on May 31,
1976, with the requirements of NFPA-101, Life Safety Code, 1967 Edition will be
considered in compliance with this chapter as long as compliance is maintained
in accordance with NFPA-101, Life Safety Code, 1967 Edition published by the
National Fire Protection Association, Batterymarch Park, Quincy, Massachusetts
02269.
(iv) Plan approval and field
inspections for health care institutions, Division C-1, are conducted by the
Department of Health.
(2)
Division C-2. This division applies to a building, or a part
thereof, where the occupants are in group habitation and are not included under
Division C-1, C-3, C-4 or C-5. Hotels, apartment buildings, multiple dwellings,
dormitories, lodging houses, orphanages, children's residential institutions,
large personal care homes, group homes, group foster homes, and the like, shall
be in this classification. See Chapter 55 (relating to Division C-2).
(3)
Division C-3. This
division applies to a building which only has a single living unit where four
through eight residents are in group habitation. Small personal care homes,
dormitories, lodging houses, orphanages, children's residential institutions,
group homes, group foster homes, and the like having four through eight
residents shall be in this classification. See Chapter 56 (relating to Division
C-3).
(4)
Division
C-4. This division applies to apartment units which qualify for a
single means of egress. See Chapter 57 (relating to Division C-4).
(5)
Division C-5. This
division applies to a building, or a part thereof, where the occupants are in
group habitation, and are mostly incapable of self-preservation, because they
are under restraint. Prisons, jails, reformatories, houses of correction and
the like shall be in this classification. C-5 occupancies which have plans
approved on or after November 30, 1998, shall comply with Chapters 3, and 14,
and all other sections specifically referred to in Chapters 3 and 14 of
NFPA-101, Life Safety Code, 1997 Edition published by the National Fire
Protection Association, Batterymarch Park, Quincy, Massachusetts
02269.
(e)
Group
D-Commercial, Office, Industrial. Buildings primarily used or designed
for the purpose of commercial, storage, office or other like purposes shall be
classified as Group D-Commercial, Office, Industrial Occupancies. Group D is
divided into the following divisions:
(1)
Division D-O (ordinary occupancy) includes occupancies involving the
manufacture, assembling, warehousing, use, sale or storage of combustible but
not highly flammable products and materials and buildings used for offices and
the like. See Chapter 58 (relating to Division D-O).
(2) Division D-H (hazardous occupancies)
includes occupancies involving highly combustible, explosive or unstable
products or materials that constitute a special fire, life or toxic hazard
because of the forms, characteristics or volume of the materials used. A
building, structure or a part thereof used for storage, warehousing,
manufacturing, processing, use or sale of highly combustible products or
materials, including the following and those of equal fire and life hazard
shall be classified under D-H hazardous occupancies. See Chapter 59 (relating
to Division D-H).
(i) Chemicals which pose
serious flame or explosive hazards upon coming into contact with water or
moisture, such as aluminum powder, calcium carbide, red phosphorous, metallic
sodium, metallic potassium, sodium peroxide, calcium phosphide, yellow
phosphorous and metallic magnesium powder.
(ii) Processes which produce dust, lint or
other particles or matter liable to instantaneous ignition or
explosion.
(iii) Ammonia, chlorine,
phosgene, carbon bisulphide and other toxic irritants or corrosive and fume
hazard gases such as acetylene, ether, ethyl chloride, ethylene, liquified
hydrocarbons, ethyl chloride gas and similar gases.
(iv) Naptha, ether, benzol, styrene,
butadiene, collodion, ethyl, acetate, amyl acetone, amyl alcohol, kerosene,
turpentine, petroleum paint, including paint mixing and spraying rooms,
varnish, dryer, gasoline, alcohol, oil in bulk quantities and similar highly
inflammable liquids. Paint spray booth approved by the Department will be
classified as D-O occupancies.
(v)
Manufacture and processing of imitation leather, paint and other pyroxylin
products.
(vi) Storage of
nitrocellulose, or products composed in whole or in part of nitrocellulose or
similar flammable materials, such as films, combs, pens.
(vii) Hydrocloric, nitric, sulphuric and
hydrofluoric acids.
(viii) Asphalt,
tar pitch, resin, waxes and fats, either alone or combined with other
materials.
(ix) Flammable fibrous
materials such as hay, straw, broomcorn, hemp, tow, jute, sisal, excelsior,
kapok, hair, oakum, and the like.
(x) Processing or storing of artificial
flowers, matches, mattresses, rubber, cork, brooms, carpet linings, paper,
pasteboard, feathers, cotton, including cotton rag sorting rooms, shoddy mills,
oil refineries, distilleries, sugar refineries, cereal, flour, grist and starch
mills, rendering plants, drying rooms, and occupancies of equal fire and life
hazard.
Notes
This section cited in 34 Pa. Code § 49.2 (relating to jurisdiction and effective dates).
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