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  2. National Building Code of Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Building_Code_of...

    The National Building Code is the model building code that forms the basis for all of the provincial building codes. Some jurisdictions create their own code based on the National Building Code, other jurisdictions have adopted the National Building often with supplementary laws or regulations to the requirements in the National Building Code.

  3. Occupant-centric building controls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupant-centric_building...

    The selection of occupancy sensing devices depends on the size of the space being monitored, the budget for sensors, the desired accuracy, the goal of the sensor (detecting occupant presence or count), and security considerations. Unlike occupant presence data, acquiring occupant preference data requires direct feedback from building occupants.

  4. Building occupancy classifications - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Building_occupancy...

    Examples: banks, insurance agencies, government buildings (including police and fire stations), and doctor's offices. Educational (Group E) - schools and day care centers up to the 12th grade. Factory (Group F) - places where goods are manufactured or repaired (unless considered "High-Hazard" (below)). Examples: factories and dry cleaners.

  5. Occupancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occupancy

    Occupancy can also refer to the number of units in use, such as hotel rooms, apartment flats, or offices. When a motel is at full occupancy, it is common practice to turn on a NO VACANCY neon sign. Completely vacant buildings can also attract crime. A 2017 study found that demolishing vacant buildings "reduce crime by about 8 percent on the ...

  6. Certificate of occupancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certificate_of_occupancy

    A certificate of occupancy is evidence that the building complies substantially with the plans and specifications that have been submitted to, and approved by, the local authority. It complements a building permit —a document that must be filed by the applicant with the local authority before construction to indicate that the proposed ...

  7. Post-occupancy evaluation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-occupancy_evaluation

    Other commonly used quantitative measures include space metrics, for example occupational density, space utilization and tenant efficiency ratio. Cost, either expressed as the cost of the project per square meter or the total cost of occupancy, is considered a key metric in building evaluation and may be compared with the occupant feedback to ...

  8. Floor area ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floor_area_ratio

    Floor Area ratio is sometimes called floor space ratio (FSR), floor space index (FSI), site ratio or plot ratio. The difference between FAR and FSI is that the first is a ratio, while the latter is an index. Index numbers are values expressed as a percentage of a single base figure. Thus an FAR of 1.5 is translated as an FSI of 150%.

  9. Miscellaneous electric load - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miscellaneous_electric_load

    Reducing energy loads of main systems equipment providing heating, cooling and water heating can be achieved by upgrading physical equipment including replacing older equipment with newer, more energy-efficient units, upgrading the building envelope with insulation and higher-grade windows, creating more efficient zoning within heating/cooling air distribution ducts, and deployment of advanced ...