My thoughts were to bring the "backup" conductors into the building, go into a tap box, and supply two separate enclosed breakers. One of these would supply the emergency ATS, and the other would supply the LRSB ATS. That would get me into 700.9(B)(5)(a).
My problem is two fold. First, 700.9(B)(5)(b) speaks of having no OCPD at the source. But the central plant (where the generators are located) will have overcurrent protection, to protect the feeders that loop around the site.
Secondly, where exactly is the "source" to which the second sentence of 700.9(B) refers? If I have three generators in a central plant, each connected to the same bus via its own generator breaker, and from that bus there are breakers that protect the feeders that run around the site, and once I go into a building I include the wiring described at the top of this post, then does the "wiring from an emergency source . . . to emergency loads. . ." start at,
- Each generator's breaker, or
- The breaker that protects the loop conductors, or
- The distribution equipment inside the building, or
- The load side of the emergency ATS?
It is certainly a bit of a hairy situation. First let me give you my thoughts about the definition of "source". I think the second sentence in 700.9(B) is not very clear in that it talks about
"Wiring from an emergency source OR emergency source distribution overcurrent" I could see two possible interpretations: I. The intent is to establish that if overcurrent protection does not exist at the generator, the "source" is considered to start at the overcurrent protection in the distribution equipment. II. The second possible intent, and one that would help you out, is that if a large scale generation is distributed through a complex distribution system, the "source" can be considered to start at the distribution OCPD.
As far as the issue with having OCPDs at the generator, again I think the intent is probably similar to the second intent mentioned above. 700.9(B)(5) does start by saying "
wiring from an emergency source to supply any combination of emergency, legally required, or optinal load...", but immediately afterwards in conditions (a) & (b), there's mention of verticle sections of switchboards. This leads me to believe they intend for the seperate wiring rule to begin at the distribution switchboard immediately downstream of the generator, so that you can run the feeders from the genset to the proper switchboard, and then run each section seperately to seperate E, LR, & OSB loads.
A final comment - I dont know how they really define the 'selective coordination' requirement, so couldn't you just download and toss together a few IT curves from the OCPDs between the generator and distribution board secondaries and call it a coordination study? Just a (silly

) thought that came to mind...