FF: College Entrance

22 02, 2018

Why Compromise?

By |2018-02-22T13:05:35-05:00February 22nd, 2018|School Security|11 Comments

Let's help school administrators learn how to secure doors more quickly while keeping evacuation options open, rather than on how to make security cheaper while ignoring the potential consequences.

9 02, 2018

FF: State to City College: Uninstall 1,000 Fire Code-Defying ‘Barricade Devices’

By |2022-05-05T23:12:15-04:00February 9th, 2018|Fixed-it Friday, Means of Egress, School Security|9 Comments

Yesterday, I read an article about a college in California that purchased and installed 1,000 barricade devices at a cost of more than $200,000, as recommended by the local police chief. The college later removed the devices, as they are not compliant with the building code and fire code in California, or with the ADA.

22 01, 2018

WWYD? How can we help UL spread their message?

By |2018-01-22T14:29:27-05:00January 22nd, 2018|Close the Door, FDAI, Fire Doors, WWYD?|6 Comments

You have all heard me talk about how important it is to sleep with your bedroom door closed at night - to benefit from the protection provided by a closed door.  I've been writing about fire doors on iDigHardware for 9 YEARS(!), trying to inform as many people as possible about the purpose of fire doors, why they need to be closed and latched when a fire occurs, and what is involved with an annual fire door inspection.

15 01, 2018

QQ: Empty Tab Slots

By |2018-01-26T12:12:08-05:00January 15th, 2018|Code Development, Doors & Frames, FDAI, Fire Doors, Quick Question|8 Comments

The increased enforcement of the inspection requirements for fire door assemblies has brought some pretty intense scrutiny upon the various components.  In some cases we're finding that NFPA 80 and the model codes don't currently address the fine details of how these assemblies are tested and constructed.

18 12, 2017

Decoded: Panic Hardware Requirements for Rooms Housing Electrical Equipment

By |2023-12-19T01:10:43-05:00December 18th, 2017|Panic Hardware|7 Comments

NFPA 70 – National Electrical Code (NEC) has been adopted by most US states, and includes requirements for panic hardware or fire exit hardware on certain rooms housing electrical equipment; the voltage and amperage thresholds that determine which rooms require panic hardware were changed in the 2017 edition of this code.

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