Skip to Main Content
Building Safety Journal Logo

Building Safety Journal - International Code Council

Main Menu

Menu

      • April, 2025 Articles
      • March, 2025 Articles
      • February, 2025 Articles
      • January, 2025 Articles
      • December, 2024 Articles
      • November, 2024 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 4 plus two

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

ICC Commemorates Milestone in Construction Codes

May 6th, 2013
by International Code Council
  • Press Releases

40 Years Ago Code Officials First Included Smoke Alarms in Construction Codes as a Life-Saving Measure

It was 1973 when smoke alarms were first required in the construction codes known today as the I-Codes, published by the International Code Council. To salute this life-saving milestone, the Code Council has dedicated the first week of Building Safety Month 2013, May 6-12, sponsored by the Air Movement and Control Association International, to fire safety and awareness. Smoke alarms have saved countless numbers of lives by alerting people to fires in homes and other buildings.

Carbon monoxide alarms also are a safety requirement in new homes and townhomes with appliances fueled by natural gas, propane, coal, wood, charcoal, oil or kerosene. Affected appliances include furnaces, ranges, water heaters, clothes dryers, room heaters, portable generators and fireplaces.

Most deaths caused by residential fires were in homes that did not have working smoke alarms. Current codes require working smoke alarms on every level of a home, outside each separate sleeping area in the immediate vicinity of bedrooms and in each bedroom.

Since 1980, Building Safety Month has been an annual public safety awareness campaign. Many of the 50,000 ICC members schedule community outreach events and school-based programs across the nation to demonstrate the importance of building to code. More information about Building Safety Month is available at www.buildingsafetymonth.org.

The Air Movement and Control Association International is a not for profit international association of the world’s manufacturers of related air system equipment. In 1939 the National Board of Fire Underwriters recommended that dampers be installed in the HVAC system to interrupt the passage of smoke, flame and heat during a fire. Since that time, the effectiveness of automatic closing fire and/or smoke dampers and automatic fan shutdown of the HVAC system in preventing the migration of smoke, flame and heat to areas of a building remote from the area of origin has been substantiated by numerous experts in the field of the fire sciences. Throughout the world, fire protection and mechanical engineers continue to incorporate fire and/or smoke dampers into the fire protection design of many types of modern buildings.

The International Code Council is a member-focused association. It is dedicated to developing model codes and standards used in the design, build and compliance process to construct safe, sustainable, affordable and resilient structures. Most U.S. communities and many global markets choose the International Codes.

About the Author
International Code Council
The International Code Council is a nonprofit association that provides a wide range of building safety solutions, including product evaluation, accreditation, certification, codification and training. It develops model codes and standards used worldwide to construct safe, sustainable, affordable and resilient structures.
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 24731 BSM BSJ Website 270x270 WAD FINAL
  • 25 24651 TRN WDS BSJ BSJW WAD 270x270 FINAL a
  • tile 3
  • 25 24699 PD TRN SKGA Sub Plan BSJ WAD FINAL 270 x 270 2
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
QPUCLsQkDfUqDUGilh-cafh-e7DaFl_p0Y_m5w31ghE=.html