Skip to Main Content
Building Safety Journal Logo

Building Safety Journal - International Code Council

Main Menu

Menu

      • June, 2025 Articles
      • May, 2025 Articles
      • April, 2025 Articles
      • March, 2025 Articles
      • February, 2025 Articles
      • January, 2025 Articles
      • 2025 Articles
      • 2024 Articles
      • Deep Dives
      • Member News
      • Personal Perspectives
      • Quick Hits
      • Technical Topics
      • Press Releases
      • Sponsored Content
      • View All
      • Buildings, Construction, Architecture/Design
      • Fire, Wildland-Urban Interface
      • Plumbing, Mechanical, Fuel Gas, Pools/Spas
      • Energy, Solar, Green, Sustainability
      • Disaster Preparedness, Mitigation, Resiliency
  • Subscribe
    • ICC Family of Solutions
    • ICCSafe
    • myICC
    • Digital Codes
    • cdpACCESS
    • Store
    • Support

Join today!

Keep up-to-date on crucial industry news, innovative training and expert technical advice with a free subscription to the award-winning Building Safety Journal.

Subscribe

Sign In or Register Here

Provide your email address
Provide your password
Answer the math challenge
Please enter your e-mail address below. We will email you a link to reset your password.
Provide your email address
Answer the math challenge
To complete your registration, please verify your email address.
Answer the math challenge

We have emailed the address you provided. Please click the link in the email to confirm your email address.

Your account has been marked for password reset. Please change your password.
Provide your new password
Verify your new password
Answer the math challenge 6 minus three

Only registered ICC members have access to this article at this time.

Explore all the benefits that ICC Membership has to offer and become a member today to gain access to this exciting content.

If you're already an ICC member Sign In Now.

Can We Help?

  • Reset My Password
  • I Need More Help

Saving with the standards of the International Building Code

May 10th, 2021
by Paul DeBaggis
  • Technical Topics

Although Chapter 35 of the International Building Code (IBC), Referenced Standards, is a path of the code that building officials often overlook, most of the listings therein offer helpful and free information. The word “free” should grab code readers, because a speck of our DNA surely must read, “Belongs to an overworked and underfunded profession.” For many of us, a mere shoestring holds our budget together.

So, I tackled this task with one eye on our wallets, and the other focused on useful data. At some of these websites, you will find standards, drawings and FAQs. Others feature a look at magazines, white papers and interpretations. A few more present read-only information, meaning you can read or study, but you cannot print. Overall, up to 75 percent of these locations offer information at no cost.

Below, I have commented on 10 sites and added the addresses of several more. If and when you look for a standard on your own, the trial-and-error method works best. When I googled “GA” for the Gypsum Association, I got the state of Georgia!

Some of the following will require a password and login, but you can do this without paying a fee. Check the dates on whatever you read. A 1980 article may help you, but it also could be obsolete.

 

American Concrete Institute

The American Concrete Institute (ACI) provides a license look-up for concrete testers’ certifications, a place I sometimes visit. ACI also delivers “Free Online Educational Presentations.” These are in a PowerPoint format with voice, but I click the PDF and work at my own pace. I uncovered useful facts in “Coastal Houses,” “Epoxy Injection” and others. The FAQs deliver the basics of concrete.

 

American Institute of Steel Construction

The American Institute of Steel Construction posts free information. In “Engineering FAQs” you will find a couple of hundred questions (“Must metal burrs be removed from holes?”). The document, “Specifications for Structural Steel Buildings,” is available. Also, “Facts for Steel Buildings,” features recent studies of steel as it relates to fire, blast, progressive collapse and seismic events. (This includes info on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon attack on 9/11/2001.)

 

American Wood Council

The American Wood Council (AWC) offers plenty of no-cost wood construction data in a “view-only” format. The Design for Code Acceptance series is excellent. National Design Specifications for Wood Construction, The Wood Frame Construction Manual, span tables, technical reports and other documents are available. Plus, the AWC presents several complementary courses with American Institute of Architects (AIA) credits.

 

American Wood Protection Association

The American Wood Protection Association offers information for building inspectors. In the “Code Official” portion of the site, click on the “Use Category Infographic” and see a home and 15 locations — deck, stairs, columns, etc. — along with the type of preservative-treated (PT) required. You will also find info explaining the differences on a PT stamp.

 

American Welding Society

The American Welding Society provides some no-cost welding code and safety downloads, including fact sheets, and protection of welders and nearby persons. The site also features special inspections and steel. Try “Free Downloads.”

 

Environmental Protection Agency

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) site provides data on wood and solid fuel stoves. “Burn Wise” covers the EPA’s stove program with questions and answers, installation methods, and an inventory of approved stoves. For me, it’s a definite “go-to.” As for other EPA topics, you may not be interested in bedbugs, but radon, asbestos, mold and septic tanks may catch your attention.

 

International Code Council

The International Code Council (ICC) publishes 15 codes, including building, residential, plumbing, heating/ventilation/air conditioning, energy and others. Each of these is available in “public access” at no charge. An ICC professional membership includes written or telephone opinions. When I started my career, every city and town in my state had its own building code, so I welcome the uniformity the Code Council brings to the profession.

 

International Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Association

The International Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Association (IKECA) gives a free look at The IKECA Journal and articles such as grease fires in commercial kitchens. “The Inspector’s Top 10 List” of approximately 50 questions about kitchen exhaust inspections should be useful. Membership is open to building officials as a courtesy.

 

National Association of Architectural Metal Manufacturers

The National Association of Architectural Metal Manufacturers (NAAMM) has free downloads of fire ratings of metal doors and stairs, and pipe railing systems. The “Pipe Railing System Manual” explains differences in metal guard and handrails, including welding grades, connection to walls, floors or ramps. A similar manual explains metal stairs. NAAMM also delivers some no-cost courses with an AIA certificate.

 

National Fire Protection Association

The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) website offers a complimentary look at all of its standards. (The user must agree to not download them.) I use this site for egress, sprinklers, fire-rated materials and several other topics. NFPA also features free webinars and online training.

 

Additional resources

Air Conditioning Contractors of America

Engineered Wood Association (formerly American Plywood Association)

American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (known as ASHRAE)

Federal Emergency Management Agency

FM Global

Gypsum Association

Portland Cement Association

Post-Tensioning Institute

Structural Building Components Association

Steel Deck Institute

Underwriters Laboratories

About the Author
Paul M. DeBaggis, CBO, lives in Franklin, Mass. He has worked with building codes since 1966. In retirement, he works in Easton, Mass., as a part-time building inspector, and with his own company DeBaggis Enterprises.
Submissions
Check out upcoming BSJ topics and send us articles for consideration:
Or send by email

Want to advertise in the BSJ?
Click Here

Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter
Share on LinkedIn
Linkedin

  • 25 24862 MTS CLE BSJ WAD 270X270 FINAL
  • 25 24651 TRN WDS BSJ BSJW WAD 270x270 FINAL a
  • 25 24699 PD TRN SKGA Sub Plan BSJ WAD FINAL 270 x 270 2
  • 24 23932 CORP MEM Online Community 270x270 WAD FINAL 1
  • ICC Updated Ad 270 x 270 px 1
International Code Council
International Code Council
International Code Council
International Code Council

Subscribe to the Building Safety Journal

Subscribe

Connect with Us

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • X
  • YouTube
  • Instagram

ICC Family of Solutions

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact Us
  • Accessibility Policy
9CbbWDKxYiotda3cYmi94YMo_NJBPY47aQ0b3dFGqzk=.html