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OSHA
3183 Download
PDF File 
What
are the requirements
for exits?
Exits must be separated from the workplace
by fire resistant materials that is, one-hour
fire-resistance rating if the exit connects three or
fewer stories, and two-hour fire-resistance rating
if the exit connects more than three floors.
Exits can have only those openings necessary
to allow access to the exit from occupied areas
of the workplace or to the exit discharge.
Openings must be protected by a self-closing, approved fire
door that remains closed or automatically closes
in an emergency.
Keep the line-of-sight to exit signs clearly
visible always.
Install "EXIT"signs in plainly legible
letters.
Safety
Features for Exit Routes
Keep
exit routes free of explosive
or highly flammable
furnishings and other decorations.
Arrange exit routes so employees will not have
to travel
toward a high-hazard area unless the path of travel
is
effectively shielded from the high-hazard area.
Ensure that exit routes are free and unobstructed
such
as by materials, equipment, locked doors, or dead-end
corridors.
Provide lighting for exit routes adequate for
employees
with normal vision.
Keep exit route doors free of decorations or
signs that
obscure the visibility of exit route doors.
Post signs along the exit access indicating
the direction
of travel to the nearest exit and exit discharge
if that
direction is not immediately apparent.
Mark doors or passages along an exit access
that could
be mistaken for an exit ¡°Not an Exit¡± or
with a sign
identifying its use (such as ¡°Closet¡±).
Renew fire-retardant paints or solutions when
needed.
Maintain exit routes during construction, repairs,
or
alterations.
Emergency
Exit Routes
What Everyone Should Know
How would you escape from your workplace in an emergency?
Do you know where all the exits are in case your
first choice is too crowded? Are you sure the doors
will be unlocked and that the exit access behind
them will not be blocked during a fire, explosion,
or other crisis. Knowing the answers to these questions
could keep you safe during an emergency.
How many exit routes must a workplace
have?
Usually, a workplace must have at least two exit
routes for prompt evacuation. But more than two
exits are required if the number of employees, size
of the building, or arrangement of the workplace
will not allow a safe evacuation. Exit routes must
be located as far away as
practical from each other in case one is blocked
by fire or smoke.
Design
and Construction Requirements
Exit routes must be permanent
parts of the workplace.
Exit discharges must lead directly outside
or to a street, walkway, refuge area, public way, or
open space with access to the outside.
Exit
discharge areas must
be large enough to accommodate
people likely to use the
exit route.
Exit route doors must be unlocked from
the inside. They must be free of devices or alarms
that could restrict use of the exit route if the device
or alarm fails.
Exit routes can be connected to rooms
only by side-hinged doors, which must swing out in
the direction of travel if the room may be occupied
by more than 50 people.
Exit routes must support the maximum
permitted occupant load for each floor served, and
the capacity of an exit route may not decrease
in the direction of exit route travel to the exit
discharge.
Exit routes must have ceilings at least
7 ft., 6 in. high.
An exit access must be at least 28 inches
wide at all points. Objects that project into the exit
must not reduce its width.
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