OK, obviously it is not a bad idea to have your electrical room fire rated. But do the codes require that?
NEC 110.25 (C), the section requiring two panic-bar exit doors from an electrical working space, is the section of the NEC I have to explain to architects most often. "The NEC requires WHAT!?!" is the usual response. Usually I get a look that indicates I have just sprouted antennae out of the top of my head. "Yes, the ELECTRICAL code really does require panic bar doors, you heard it right." The latest question I got is, do we need fire rated doors? So far I don't see anything in the electrical code that would require anything in the electrical room to be fire rated, let alone the doors. I am not as familiar with other building codes. I won't argue that fire rated doors and walls are not a good idea, but the question is, are they required by any of the codes?
NEC 110.25 (C), the section requiring two panic-bar exit doors from an electrical working space, is the section of the NEC I have to explain to architects most often. "The NEC requires WHAT!?!" is the usual response. Usually I get a look that indicates I have just sprouted antennae out of the top of my head. "Yes, the ELECTRICAL code really does require panic bar doors, you heard it right." The latest question I got is, do we need fire rated doors? So far I don't see anything in the electrical code that would require anything in the electrical room to be fire rated, let alone the doors. I am not as familiar with other building codes. I won't argue that fire rated doors and walls are not a good idea, but the question is, are they required by any of the codes?