How to Decode Building Codes (and Why You Should Care)

Image for article titled How to Decode Building Codes (and Why You Should Care)

Photo: Tadija Savic (Shutterstock)

Unless your job involves working with building codes, they’re probably not something you encounter or think about on a regular basis. Though we may refer to a questionable electrical setup in an apartment, or a building where several doors are blocked or inaccessible as looking like they’re “not up to code,” most of us aren’t able to provide any further details about what code we’re talking about, and what it entails.

But even if we don’t deal with building codes very often, it still helps to have at least some background on what they are, and why they’re important. Here’s what to know.

What are building codes?

Building codes outline the minimum standards for constructing buildings that protect public health, as well as the general safety and welfare of the people inside and around them at any given time (including during the construction process).

Though they’ve been around in some form since ancient times, the first of what are considered the predecessors of modern building codes were enacted in the 17th century, following devastating fires that would take out entire towns or parts of cities with primarily wooden structures, and mostly focused on using building materials less likely to burn.

Enacting building codes was also an aim of reformers and Progressive Era campaigners of the 19th and 20th centuries, looking to improve living conditions in cities’ crowded tenements.

Are building codes legally binding?

While the specifics of building codes differ based on the state, city, and/or county, they’re are typically based on broader model codes like the International Building Code (IBC), so there tends to be at least some overlap. That’s also the case with the accessibility design standards found in the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

And though the IBC and other model building codes themselves aren’t legally binding, they serve as the basis upon which regional and local authorities create and enact laws.

Why are building codes important?

Building codes still aim to serve their original function of keeping people in and around a building safe by setting minimum requirements for aspects of construction including safe wiring, fire prevention, and structural integrity. They’re also a way to work towards population-wide improvements in living conditions (though getting existing housing up to code is often an uphill battle).

Building codes can also have financial impacts. According to a study conducted by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and published in November 2020 called Building Codes Save, over a 20-year period, cities and counties with modern building codes avoided at least $132 billion in losses from natural disasters when compared to jurisdictions without modern building codes.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Chicken Noodle Soup Really Can Help When You're Sick thumbnail

Chicken Noodle Soup Really Can Help When You’re Sick

Few foods are as comforting as eating soup when you're recovering from a cold. Soup has been a commonly-prescribed remedy for respiratory illness since as early as the 12th century. And warm drinks, like tea, were used for healing in ancient and modern cultures alike. We all have rituals to care for ourselves when we…
Read More
Satellite connectivity backups put to use over Red Sea thumbnail

Satellite connectivity backups put to use over Red Sea

An artist's rendition of the Intelsat-37e satellite. Credit: Boeing TAMPA, Fla. — Satellite operators are being called in to help keep Europe and Asia connected after subsea internet cables in the Red Sea were severed last week. Four of around 15 submarine cables in the Red Sea have been affected, according to Hong Kong-based cable
Read More
Hundreds of centuries-old coins unearthed in Germany likely belonged to wealthy 17th-century mayor thumbnail

Hundreds of centuries-old coins unearthed in Germany likely belonged to wealthy 17th-century mayor

Some of the coins found in a trench at the farmstead. (Image credit: Juraj Lipták / State Office for Monument Preservation and Archaeology Saxony-Anhalt) Construction workers in Germany have unearthed hundreds of coins that likely belonged to a 17th-century mayor.The "hidden" coin collection, which includes 285 silver coins originating between 1499 and 1652, was found
Read More
New species of marine plankton discovered, an overlooked source of nutrients in the oceans thumbnail

New species of marine plankton discovered, an overlooked source of nutrients in the oceans

A team of University of Hawai'i at Manoa researchers in the Department of Oceanography's Center for Microbial Oceanography -- Research and Education (C-MORE), along with collaborators at the University of California Santa Cruz, and the California State University San Marcos, have just published a paper in Nature Communications announcing the discovery of two new and…
Read More
Physicists Discover New Type of ‘Strange Metal’ thumbnail

Physicists Discover New Type of ‘Strange Metal’

A team of physicists from the United States and China has detected the unexpected signatures of strange metallicity in a material in which electrical charge is carried not by electrons, but by more ‘wave-like’ entities called Cooper pairs. Scanning electron microscopy image of a nanopatterned YBa2Cu3O7−δ (YBCO) thin film. The 12-nm-thick nanopatterned YBCO thin film…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share