26 Tex. Admin. Code § 508.54 - Preparation, Submittal, Review and Approval of Plans, and Retention of Records
(a) General.
(1) Ambulatory surgical center (ASC)
owners/operators shall not begin construction of a new building, additions to
or renovations or conversions of existing buildings until the department
approves final construction documents.
(2) Plans and specifications describing the
construction of new buildings and additions to or renovations and conversions
of existing buildings shall be prepared by registered architects and/or
licensed professional engineers and meet the requirements of this
subchapter.
(3) The names of spaces
used in the functional program narrative, preliminary documents, final
construction documents and specifications shall be consistent with the names of
the spaces used in this chapter.
(4) The department shall notify the ASC
owner/operator of the result of its review of each type of submission discussed
in this section.
(5) The ASC
owner/operator shall respond to all department requests for additional
information, including providing a plan of correction for deficiencies cited by
the department.
(6) Once final
construction documents are approved, the ASC owner/operator shall request
inspections in accordance with § 135.55 of this title (relating to
Construction, Inspections, and Approval of Project).
(7) When construction is delayed for longer
than one year from the plan approval or self-certification approval date,
construction documents shall be resubmitted to the department for review and
approval. The plans shall be accompanied by a new application for plan review
and functional program narrative.
(8) The ASC owner/operator shall provide
written notification to the department when a project has been placed on hold,
canceled, or abandoned.
(9) The
department may close a project file after one year of assigning an application
number to a project if the project has been placed on hold.
(b) Submission of projects and
assignment of application number.
(1) The ASC
owner/operator or representative shall submit the following items to the
department in care of the mailing or overnight delivery address that appears on
the application for plan review:
(A) a
completed and signed application for plan review. The application for plan
review may be obtained by calling the department's architectural review group
by telephone at (512) 834-6649 or visit the Architectural Review at
www.dshs.state.tx.us/hfp;
(B) a
functional program narrative in accordance with subsection (d) of this section;
and
(C) final construction
documents in accordance with subsection (f) of this section.
(2) The cost of submitting
documents/plans and specifications shall be borne by the sender.
(3) Once the department has determined that
the submission required in paragraph (1) of this subsection is complete, the
department shall assign an application number to the project that shall be
referenced on all documents and correspondence related to the project. Final
construction documents shall be reviewed in the chronological order
received.
(4) All deficiencies
noted in the final plan review shall be satisfactorily resolved before approval
of project for construction will be granted.
(5) Construction shall not begin until the
ASC owner/operator of the facility receives written notification from the
department that the final construction documents have been approved.
(c) Feasibility conference. An ASC
owner/operator or representative may request a feasibility conference. A
feasibility conference is an informal meeting between a member of the
department's architectural review group staff and the ASC owner/operator or
representative to determine the feasibility of a project, for consultation and
informational purposes, and to facilitate and establish understanding of
compliance with the rules and codes.
(1) A
feasibility conference is not a substitute for plan review.
(2) An ASC owner/operator or representative
may schedule a feasibility conference by calling the department's architectural
review group by telephone number (512) 834-6649.
(3) The ASC owner/operator or representative
shall provide at the feasibility conference the items in subsection (b)(1)(A) -
(C) of this section and a set of preliminary plans or final construction
documents.
(4) The ASC
owner/operator or representative is responsible for recording conference notes
and shall submit the notes to the department.
(d) Functional program narrative. The ASC
owner/operator shall submit a functional program narrative to the department
with each new project in accordance with subsection (b)(1)(B) of this section.
The functional program narrative shall be presented on facility letterhead,
signed by ASC administration, include the functional description of each space,
and the following:
(1) departmental
relationships and other basic information relating to the fulfillment of the
facility's objectives;
(2) a
description of each function to be performed, approximate space needed for
these functions, occupants of the various spaces, projected occupant load,
types of equipment required, interrelationship of various functions and spaces,
and any special design features;
(3) energy conservation measures, included in
building, mechanical, and electrical designs;
(4) a description of the type of asepsis
control in diagnostic and treatment areas; and
(5) the type of construction (existing or
proposed) as stated in §20.1.6 of National Fire Protection Association
101, Life Safety Code, 2003 Edition (NFPA 101), published by the National Fire
Protection Association. All documents published by the NFPA as referenced in
this section may be obtained by writing or calling the NFPA at the following
address and telephone number: 1 Batterymarch Park, Quincy, Massachusetts
02169-7471, (800) 344-3555.
(e) Preliminary documents. The department may
request preliminary documents. If requested by the department, the submission
shall consist of the items in subsection (b)(1)(A) - (C) of this section,
preliminary plans, and outline specifications. The documents shall contain
sufficient information to establish the project scope, description of functions
to be performed, project location, required fire safety and exiting
requirements, building construction type, compartmentation showing fire and
smoke barriers, and the usage of all spaces, areas, and rooms on every floor
level.
(f) Final construction
documents. Final construction documents and specifications shall be submitted
to the department for review and approval prior to start of construction. All
final documents and specifications shall be appropriately sealed and signed by
the projects's registered architect and professional engineer(s) licensed by
the State of Texas.
(1) Submission of final
construction documents. The ASC owner/operator shall submit to the department
for review and approval the items in subsection (b)(1)(A) - (C) of this section
(if not previously submitted with preliminary documents) and one set of final
construction documents and specifications covering the construction of new
buildings or alterations, additions, conversions, modernizations, or
renovations to existing buildings.
(2) Preparation of final construction
documents. Construction documents shall be well-prepared so that clear and
distinct prints may be obtained, shall be accurately and adequately
dimensioned, shall include all necessary explanatory notes, schedules, and
legends, and shall be adequate for contract purposes. Compliance with model
building codes and this chapter shall be indicated. The type of construction,
as classified by National Fire Protection Association 220, Standard on Types of
Building Construction, 1999 Edition, shall be provided for existing and new
facilities. Final plans shall be drawn to a sufficiently large-scale to clearly
illustrate the proposed design but not less than one-eighth inch equals one
foot. All spaces shall be identified by usage (using the names of spaces used
in this chapter) on all plans (architectural, fire safety, mechanical,
electrical, etc.) submitted. Separate drawings shall be prepared for each of
the following branches of work.
(A)
Architectural plans. Architectural drawings shall include the following:
(i) a map of the area within a 500 foot
radius of the facility site shall be provided and any hazardous and undesirable
location noted in § 135.52(a) of this title (relating to Construction
Requirements for a New Ambulatory Surgical Center) shall be
identified;
(ii) site plan showing
all new topography, newly established levels and grades, existing structures on
the site (if any), new buildings and structures, roadways, parking, walks,
easement, overhead or underground utilities or service lines, and the extent of
the areas to be landscaped. All structures which are to be removed under the
construction contract and improvements shall be shown. A general description of
the immediate area surrounding the site shall be provided;
(iii) plan of each floor and roof to include
fire and smoke separation, means of egress, and identification of all
spaces;
(iv) schedules of doors,
windows, and finishes;
(v)
elevations of each facade;
(vi)
sections through building; and
(vii) scaled details as necessary.
(B) Fire safety plans. These
drawings shall be provided for all newly constructed buildings, conversions of
existing buildings for facilities, additions to existing licensed facilities,
and remodeled portions of existing buildings containing licensed facilities.
Fire safety plans shall be of a sufficiently large-scale to clearly illustrate
the proposed design but not less than one-sixteenth inch equals one foot and
shall include the following information:
(i)
separate fire safety plans (preferably one floor plan per sheet) shall indicate
location of fire protection rated walls and partitions, location and fire
resistance rating of each fire damper, and the required means of egress
(corridors, stairs, exits, exit passageways);
(I) when a new building is to contain a
proposed facility, when an existing building is converted to a facility, or
when an addition is made to an existing facility building, plans of each floor
and roof shall be provided;
(II)
when a portion of a building is remodeled or when a new service is added, only
the plan of the floor where the remodeling will take place or new service will
be introduced, and the plan of the floor of discharge shall be
provided;
(ii)
designated smoke compartments with floor areas of each compartment, location,
and fire resistance rating (one or two hour) of each smoke partition, location,
type, and fire resistance rating of each smoke damper;
(iii) location of all required fire alarm
devices, including all fire alarm control panels, manual pull stations, audible
and visual fire alarm signaling devices, smoke detectors (ceiling and
duct-mounted), fire alarm annunciators, fire alarm transmission devices, fire
sprinkler flow switches, and control valve supervisory switches on each of the
floor plans; and
(iv) areas
protected with fire sprinkler systems (pendant, sidewall or upright, normal or
quick response, and temperature rating shall be indicated), stand pipe system
risers and sizes with valves and inside and outside fire department
connections, fire sprinkler risers and sizes, location and type of portable
fire extinguishers.
(C)
Equipment drawings. Equipment drawings shall include the following:
(i) all equipment necessary for the operation
of the facility as planned. The design shall indicate provisions for the
installation of large and special items of equipment and for service
accessibility;
(ii) fixed equipment
(equipment which is permanently affixed to the building or which must be
permanently connected to a service distribution system designed and installed
during construction for the specific use of the equipment). The term "fixed
equipment" includes items such as laundry extractors, walk-in refrigerators,
communication systems, and built-in casework (cabinets);
(iii) movable equipment (equipment not
described in clause (ii) of this subparagraph as fixed). The term "moveable
equipment" includes wheeled equipment, plug-in type monitoring equipment, and
relocatable items; and
(iv)
equipment which is not included in the construction contract but which requires
mechanical or electrical service connections or construction modifications. The
equipment described in this clause shall be identified on the drawings to
ensure its coordination with the architectural, mechanical, and electrical
phases of construction.
(D) Structural drawings. Structural drawings
shall include:
(i) plans for foundations,
floors, roofs, and all intermediate levels;
(ii) a complete design with sizes, sections,
and the relative location of the various members;
(iii) a schedule of beams, girders, and
columns;
(iv) dimensioned floor
levels, column centers, and offsets;
(v) details of all special connections,
assemblies, and expansion joints; and
(vi) special openings and pipe sleeves
dimensioned or otherwise noted for easy reference.
(E) Mechanical drawings. Mechanical drawings
shall include:
(i) complete ventilation
systems (supply, return, exhaust), all fire and smoke partitions, locations of
all dampers, registers, and grilles, air volume flow at each device, and
identification of all spaces (e.g., corridor, patient room, operating
room);
(ii) boilers, chillers,
heating and cooling piping systems (steam piping, hot water, chilled water),
and associated pumps;
(iii) cold
and warm water supply systems, water heaters, storage tanks, circulating pumps,
plumbing fixtures, emergency water storage tank(s) (if provided), and special
piping systems such as for deionized water;
(iv) nonflammable medical gas piping (oxygen,
compressed medical air, vacuum systems, nitrous oxide), emergency shutoff
valves, pressure gages, alarm modules, gas outlets;
(v) drain piping systems (waste and soiled
piping systems, laboratory drain systems, roof drain systems);
(vi) fire protection piping systems
(sprinkler piping systems, fire standpipe systems, water or chemical
extinguisher piping system for cooking equipment);
(vii) piping riser diagrams, equipment
schedules, control diagrams or narrative description of controls, filters, and
location of all duct-mounted smoke detectors; and
(viii) laboratory exhaust and safety
cabinets.
(F) Electrical
drawings. Electrical drawings shall include:
(i) electrical service entrance with service
switches, service feeders to the public service feeders, and characteristics of
the light and power current including transformers and their
connections;
(ii) location of all
normal electrical system and essential electrical system conduits, wiring,
receptacles, light fixtures, switches, and equipment which require permanent
electrical connections, on plans of each building level:
(I) light fixtures marked distinctly to
indicate connection to critical or life safety branch circuits or to normal
lighting circuits; and
(II) outlets
marked distinctly to indicate connection to critical, life safety, or normal
power circuits;
(iii)
telephone and communication, fixed computers, terminals, connections, outlets,
and equipment;
(iv) nurses calling
system showing all stations, signals, and annunciators on the plans;
(v) in addition to electrical plans, single
line diagrams prepared for:
(I) complete
electrical system consisting of the normal electrical system and the essential
electrical system including the on-site generator(s), transfer switch(es),
emergency system (life safety branch and critical branch), equipment system,
panels, subpanels, transformers, conduit, wire sizes, main switchboard, power
panels, light panels, and equipment for additions to existing buildings,
proposed new facilities, and remodeled portions of existing facilities. Feeder
and conduit sizes shall be shown with schedule of feeder breakers or
switches;
(II) complete nurses
calling system with all stations, signals, annunciators, etc. with room number
noted by each device and indicating the type of system (nurses regular calling
system, nurses emergency calling system, or staff emergency assistance calling
system);
(III) a single line
diagram of the complete fire alarm system showing all control panels, signaling
and detection devices and the room number where each device is located;
and
(vi) schedules of
all panels indicating connection to life safety branch, critical branch,
equipment system or normal system, and connected load at each panel.
(3) Construction
document changes. Any changes to the final construction documents which affect
or change the function, design, or designated use of an area shall be submitted
to the department for approval prior to authorization of the
modifications.
(g)
Special submittals.
(1) Self-certification.
(A) In an effort to shorten the plan review
and approval process, the ASC owner/operator or representative may request
approval of final construction documents under the self-certification review
process.
(i) The owner/operator shall submit
the items in subsection (b)(1)(A) - (C) of this section and a completed
self-certification form, signed by the ASC owner/operator, architect of record,
and engineer(s) of record attesting that the plans and specifications are based
upon and comply with the requirements of this chapter.
(ii) By signing and submitting the
self-certification form, the ASC owner/operator accepts the following
conditions.
(I) The department retains the
right to review the final construction documents, conduct inspections of the
project, and withdraw its approval.
(II) The ASC owner/operator has a continuing
obligation to make any changes the department requires to comply with the
licensing rules whether or not physical plant construction or alterations have
been completed.
(III) The ASC
owner/operator is ultimately responsible for compliance with Health and Safety
Code, Chapter 243, Texas Ambulatory Surgical Center Licensing Act, and this
chapter.
(B)
The department shall review the request for self-certification and notify the
ASC owner/operator if the request is approved or denied. If denied, the
department shall review the final construction documents in the chronological
order in which the documents were received. Construction shall not begin until
the final construction documents have been reviewed and approved.
(2) Minor project. If a ASC
owner/operator believes that a proposed project is a minor project, the ASC
owner/operator shall provide to the department a brief written description of
the proposed project and floor plans of the areas of work. The minor project
request shall be mailed or faxed.
(A) If it is
determined that the proposed project is a minor project, the department shall
notify the ASC owner/operator of the approval, and state the number of
inspections that shall be required. A minimum of one inspection shall be
conducted.
(B) The department shall
notify the ASC owner/operator that a proposed project is not approved as a
minor project, if the project involves any of the following:
(i) remodeling or alterations which involve
alterations to load bearing members or partitions;
(ii) a change in functional
operation;
(iii) a change that
affects fire safety (e.g., modifications to the fire, smoke, and corridor
walls);
(iv) additional services
for which the ASC is not currently licensed; and
(v) a significant change to the mechanical,
electrical, plumbing, fire protection, or piped medical system.
(C) The ASC owner/operator shall
submit final construction documents in accordance with subsection (f) of this
section if the department determines the project is not a minor
project.
(3) Fire
sprinkler systems.
(A) When the sole purpose
of a project is installation of a sprinkler system, whether a partial or
complete system, the ASC owner/operator shall submit to the department for
approval the items in subsection (b)(1)(A) - (C) of this section and sprinkler
documents.
(B) Fire sprinkler
systems shall comply with the requirements of National Fire Protection
Association 13, Standard for the Installation of Sprinkler Systems, 2002
Edition (NFPA 13), and shall be designed or reviewed by an engineer who is
registered by the Texas Board of Professional Engineers in fire protection
specialty or is experienced in hydraulic design and fire sprinkler system
installation. A short resume shall be submitted if registration is not in fire
protection specialty.
(i) Fire sprinkler
working plans, complete hydraulic calculations and water supply information
shall be prepared in accordance with NFPA 13, §§14.1, 14.2 and 14.3,
for new fire sprinkler systems, alterations of and additions to existing
ones.
(ii) One set of fire
sprinkler working plans, calculations, and water supply information shall be
forwarded to the department together with the professional engineer's (P.E.
licensed in the State of Texas) certification letter stating that the sprinkler
system design complies with the requirements of NFPA 13. Certification of the
fire sprinkler system shall be submitted prior to system
installation.
(iii) Upon completion
of the fire sprinkler system installation and any required corrections, written
certification by the engineer, stating that the fire sprinkler system is
installed in accordance with NFPA 13 requirements, shall be submitted prior to
or with the written request for the final construction inspection of the
project.
(h) Retention of drawings, manuals, and
design data.
(1) As built drawings. Upon
occupancy of the building or portion thereof, the owner shall retain as part of
the ASC's permanent records, a complete set of legible architectural plans of
each building level, fire safety plans as described in subsection (f)(2)(B) of
this section for each floor reflecting fire safety requirements, and all single
line diagrams described in subsection (f)(2)(F)(v) of this section, drawings
for fixed equipment, and mechanical and electrical systems, as installed or
built.
(2) Manuals. Upon completion
of the contract, the owner shall retain as part of the ASC's permanent records
a complete set of manufacturers' operating, maintenance, and preventive
maintenance instructions; parts lists; and procurement information with numbers
and a description for each piece of equipment. Facility staff shall also be
provided with instructions on how to properly operate systems and equipment.
Required information shall include energy ratings as needed for future
conservation calculations.
(3)
Design data. The owner shall retain in the ASC's permanent records complete
design data for the facility. This shall include structural design loadings;
summary of heat loss assumption and calculations; estimated water consumption;
medical gas outlet listing; list of applicable codes; and electric power
requirements of installed equipment. All such data shall be supplied to
facilitate future alterations, additions, and changes, including, but not
limited to, energy audits and retrofit for energy conservation.
Notes
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No prior version found.