26 Tex. Admin. Code § 554.339 - Structural Requirements
(a) Every
building and every portion thereof must be designed and constructed to sustain
all dead and live loads in accordance with accepted engineering practices and
standards .
(b) Special provisions
must be made in the design of buildings in regions where local experience shows
loss of life or extensive damage to buildings resulting from hurricanes,
tornadoes, earthquakes, or floods.
(c) The sponsor is responsible for employing
qualified personnel in the preparation of plan designs and engineering and in
the construction of the facility to assure that all structural components are
adequate, safe, and meet the applicable construction requirements.
(d) The design of the structural system must
be done by or under the direction of a professional structural engineer who is
currently registered by the Texas Board of Professional Engineers and Land
Surveyors in accordance with state law.
(e) The parts of the plans, details, and
specifications covering the structural design must bear the legible seal of the
engineer on the original drawings from which the prints are made.
(f) If the municipality has a building code,
that code must govern the building requirements for the construction involved.
NFPA 101 must be used for fire safety requirements. Should discrepancies
between the codes arise, they must be called to the attention of
HHSC .
(g) In the absence of a local
building code, a nationally recognized building code must be used with regard
to the construction integrity of the building. NFPA 101 must be used for fire
safety requirements.
(h) Each
building must be classified as to building construction type for fire
resistance rating purposes in accordance with NFPA 220 and NFPA 101 .
(i) Enclosures of vertical openings between
floors must meet NFPA 101 .
(j) All
interior walls, partitions, and roof structure in buildings of fire resistive
and noncombustible construction must be of noncombustible or limited
combustible materials.
(k) Building
insulation materials, unless sealed on all sides and edges in an approved
manner, must have a flame spread rating of 25 or less when tested in accordance
with NFPA 255 and NFPA 258.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.