Yes.Do receptacles located in a pole barn(stand alone not associated with a residential dwelling)require GFCI protection?
General purpose interior receptacles, work bench area, etc.
No sinks or wash tubs.
Thanks
Do receptacles located in a pole barn(stand alone not associated with a residential dwelling)require GFCI protection?
General purpose interior receptacles, work bench area, etc.
No sinks or wash tubs.
Thanks
Gfcis are required in areas where maintenance work is done. The workbench would qualifyI would like to say yes, "but" a pole barn is not necessarily agricultural these days. I have seen those things built for any number of uses.
I would look at what it's going to be used for to find a code that would or would not require GFCI protection.
As much as I applause the GFCI install, I think your situation is a grey area. Since it is not associated with a residence it would fall under 2108(B). I can't see where any Code cycle directly addresses the issue. The '11 comes close but the 14 becomes a little less specific:
Outdoors ?? Garage, service bay ???
You might find the requirement varies by enforcement area,.
(B) Other Than Dwelling Units. All 125-volt, single-
phase, 15- and 20-ampere receptacles installed in the locations specified in 210.8(B)(1) through (8) shall have
ground-fault circuit-interrupter protection for personnel.
(1) Bathrooms
(2) Kitchens
(3) Rooftops
(4) Outdoor
(5) Sinks — where receptacles are installed within 1.8 m(6 ft) of the outside edge of the sink
(6) Indoor wet locations
(7) Locker rooms with associated showering facilities
(8) Garages, service bays, and similar areas other than vehicle exhibition halls and showrooms
But, IS the floor earthen?I would do it as a design issue, since the ground is your floor, and treat it like any outdoor installation.
While OSHA requires that, the NEC does not.Gfcis are required in areas where maintenance work is done. The workbench would qualify
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Sounds like a normally dry interior not unlike the inside of a modern warehouse. . . The dryness rules out 2017 NEC 210.8(B)(6) as a source for requiring GFCI.If this is in a jurisdiction under the 2017 NEC, I think the answer is "No, not by the NEC."6"x6" treated posts, 2"x4" girts horizontally between posts, exterior building steel, interior building steel on walls,cement floor.I know that the environment affords GFCI protection, I just want to know if somewhere in the code it mandates it.
Maybe you missed this detail in red?What about 210.8(A)(2)?
Do receptacles located in a pole barn(stand alone not associated with a residential dwelling)require GFCI protection?
General purpose interior receptacles, work bench area, etc.
No sinks or wash tubs.
I agree.Sounds like a normally dry interior not unlike the inside of a modern warehouse. . . The dryness rules out 2017 NEC 210.8(B)(6) as a source for requiring GFCI.If this is in a jurisdiction under the 2017 NEC, I think the answer is "No, not by the NEC."
Why stop with a "big enough door" . . . I can bring my motorcycle into just about any room of my house, does that make my dwelling a garage? The Article 100 Definition of Garage doesn't help.I would say if it has a garage style door or a sliding door big enough for an automobile game over it's a garage.
And I have seen "these" built with geothermally heated interior dedicated to furniture stripping, repair and finishing, where an entry enabled transfer of large pieces of "furniture".I have seen these built for road side produce stands etc. with a man door and a couple windows more of an office space type thing. I don't think a GFCI would be required.