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[email protected][_2_] trader4@optonline.net[_2_] is offline
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Default A Serious Question About Building Codes And Safety

On Jan 17, 1:57*am, Ashton Crusher wrote:
On Wed, 16 Jan 2013 07:06:53 -0600, The Daring Dufas





wrote:
This comes up because of a tragic accident with some folks I know. The
elderly grandmother, 88 was at home with her granddaughter, the
granddaughter's three young children and the granddaughter's boyfriend.
The boyfriend had just spoken to grandma then went into the room with
his gal when they heard an awful sound. Grandma had fallen down the
basement stairs to the concrete floor below. The boyfriend ran down to
check on grandma but she was fatally injured. What happened was the
door to the basement stairs opened into the stairwell and the latch was
defective and failed to hold when grandma was walking down the hallway
holding onto the walls to steady herself. When she put her weight
against the door, it sprang open and she fell through it and down the
stairs. It seems to me that most basement doors I've seen open out and
not into the stairwell. I don't know if there is a home-building code
regarding this or not but anyone building a house should consider the
safety of a door which opens into a stairwell. O_o


TDD


My sister's house has a basement with a door that opens out. *Even
with that bit of safety I think having the stairs start immediately at
the top, just beyond the door, is asking for trouble since at some
point it seems like someone is going to mistake the basement door for
a bedroom door and in the dark/dim light open it and just "walk in".
Seems like putting a couple feet of landing,on the "other side" of the
door, at the top of these stairs would make them a lot safer.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


95%+ of residential basement stairs I've seen don't have any
landing at the top. And it must not be much of a problem,
because the cases of someone doing what you suggest seem
to be rare. It would have to be dark not only in the stairwell, but
also in the area inside the house by the door. And it would
seem that if that is the case, then with your example of someone
walking around in pitch black, thinking they are entering a room,
wouldn't they then just walk off the 3 foot landing anyway?