This video from the 2022 NCC Seminars discusses Part H3 Fire Safety from NCC 2022 Volume Two.
Transcript
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[Music]
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My name is Phil Finnimore from the Australian Building Codes Board
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and today I'm going to talk about some changes in NCC 2022 relative to fire safety.
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Now the changes being made here haven't fallen from any review of an acceptable construction practice
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but rather a discovery of some provisions currently existing
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in 2019 that need to be corrected. So what we're talking about is separating walls between two
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buildings, that's two Class 1 buildings and in particular the extension of that
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fire separating wall as an external wall being the vertical projection of the building below.
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So in this particular photo we're looking at a set of town houses.
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The building on the left shaded in yellow is separated from the building on the right
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through a fire separating wall but you'll note that there's an extension of vertical
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projection of that building up to that red overhanging eave. The problem that we're trying
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to solve and this is the fact that there's a potential source of fire spread from the roof
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in the yellow shaded building into the building on the right there through that red eave area.
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Now the problem that we've discovered and are correcting relates to the current provision of
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3.7.2.7 allowable encroachments where it says an encroachment is any construction between the
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external wall of a building and another building or another boundary or a vertical projection.
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Because the wall, because it's saying an encroachment is something that is between
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the wall of the building and something else, it doesn't take into consideration where the
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projection is beyond that particular line. So the boundary or vertical projection, that dotted line
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in the diagram down below, is not caught by this particular provision because it's
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extending beyond that it's not captured because it's not between the wall and something else.
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Which effectively means you can actually have this particular situation which is not
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a desirable situation to have and doesn't necessarily meet the intention of the code.
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So what we've done to correct that is added in the Housing Provisions for 2022 a new subclause
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in 9.2.9 and that's there in (d), highlighted by that yellow or red outline, and what it's saying
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now is an encroachment is any construction that extends beyond the vertical projection of another
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building on the same allotment. What that now means is you can't have an allowable and we can't
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have an encroachment that extends beyond that because it is a potential source of fire spread.
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In 9.2.9 there's another section that we've tidied up as well and if we have a look at this one
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subclause (1)(c) and encroachment is any construction between the external wall of the building and
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the vertical projection of the external wall of another building on the same allotment. Now that's
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the outcome we're looking for but if we have a look at this particular photo and go back to
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subclause (e) and those same provisions in 2019 you'll see that this particular overhang is not
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permitted and it's not permitted because in (e) it's saying the encroachments allowed between
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the external wall of a building and the vertical projection of an adjoining building, which is that
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red dotted line up the middle, is limited to non-combustible fascias, gutters and down pipes
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but this situation with that eave overhang is much safer than one that we showed before where
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the red overhang overhanging eave was above that townhouse that was shaded in yellow.
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So the code is saying you can't do this but it's significantly safer than what we've currently got
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so what we've done is changed in the Housing Provisions for 2022 subclause (5) in the allowable
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encroachment provisions to say encroachments allowed to project beyond the vertical projection
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of another building are non-combustible fascias, gutters and downpipes. So you can have an eave
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overhang in this particular situation, you're still subject to the limitations of how close
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that can go to the vertical projection but if there are any encroachments hanging over that
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particular red dotted line they can only be non-combustible fascias, gutters and downpipes.