Object or not, as we informed him, the city is demanding that work be brought into compliance with the current code. Some of the items were life safety issues – not just the inspector’s whim as the owner protested: Wiring not connected at J boxes, PVC pipe in the plenum, and sprinkler heads that did not drop far enough below the face of the ceiling tile to allow correct coverage.
Code compliance is a significant issue to us and to (most) of our clients. But have you ever really given thought to how the code impacts us? Why we have it? What difference it makes? (Other than those occasions when it becomes a pain because it might cost us a few extra dollars?)
Can you imagine?
- A fire in your building – if you didn’t have the code compliant sprinkler system? Or the code compliant fire walls?
- Raw sewage cascading down your walls because you didn’t have code compliant plumbing.
- Cooking odors from the restaurant next door wafting through your HVAC system because you didn’t have a code compliant ventilation system?
- How about this one: Your building swaying as much as 6-10 feet due to an 8.9 earthquake – and yet it still stands and is safe – because it was code compliant.
Strict building codes have been credited with saving hundreds of thousands of lives and literally billions of dollars worth of property in this week’s earth quake and ensuing tsunami in Japan. By now, you will have seen the pictures from Japan of huge skyscrapers swaying with the movement of the earth – and yet not falling. Compare this with what we saw in Haiti last year and in China in the earthquake in 2008 where building codes are woefully inadequate or inconsistently applied. Many of us have traveled overseas and have observed some pretty scary “code violations” – and we’re not even code experts. Compare that with our code compliant building practices here in our country. I don’t know about you, but knowing the building practices and codes that we have, I always feel safe in the buildings I live and work in. I’m confident and you’re confident because our buildings have to meet some pretty strict codes.
So – on your next project, if you hear someone whining about having to correct something so it will meet the code – be proud – it’s keeping you and your people safe, it’s protecting your property and it’s part of what makes this country the best in the world.
Oh – and that client that was fighting with the city – He finally had to agree that his tenants were at risk and for their sake and his, the few dollars he was going to need to spend to correct the code violations were nothing to the risks he was running should any one of them get injured. Sometimes the profit motive works as well as the moral motive.
The Sykes Team
www.sykesconstruction.com
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