I'm looking to build a partition wall in an office to create two separate rooms in my home. Would this require a permit?
Serious answer, only if you are running electrical wires through the new wall as this obviously wouldn't be structural.nomadic_ag said:
I'm looking to build a partition wall in an office to create two separate rooms in my home. Would this require a permit?
Not citing chapter and verse of the codes but here's my understanding:nomadic_ag said:
I'm looking to build a partition wall in an office to create two separate rooms in my home. Would this require a permit?
1) This is good advicePabloSerna said:
Looks like a 1-15 review after your turn in a set of drawings. Not trying to give you any professional advice, just some things to consider:
1. Make sure you have a window or door to get out incase of a fire. There are size and access requirements that can be found just by Googling "residential means of egress."
2. Make sure you place a CO2/Smoke Detector in each room per code to meet Life Safety.
3. If you alter electrical, plumbing, or HVAC- that should be inspected for compliance. It would be unfortunate if you exceed the amp load on a circuit/breaker that results in a fire.
Codes are there for our safety.
This. Dealing with them now, only reason we are is because it's adding square footage and don't want an appraiser to turn around and say it's not permitted so can't be considered if and when we sell in the future.YellAg2004 said:
Having gone through a remodel that I pulled COH permits for, I absolutely would not pull a permit for this. Take the time/effort/$$ you would spend on permits and put it towards hiring a solid, qualified contractor that knows how to do a job right.
Anyone that thinks getting work inspected by a city inspector ensures it's done correctly hasn't ever had to actually deal with those clowns.