RocketRed
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 30, 2010
- 23
I must be missing something (maybe a portion of my brain).
We have been working with a client in a Zone X flood with a historic flood depth about 30" above finished floor. Our scope of work was to design the stop-log system for the door openings. Simple work, we have done this lots of times.
The overall project is just a renovation to an existing service station ~2100 square feet. Footprint of the building remains the same, they are just doing updates and renovations and tripped the requirement for floodproof design due to cost of renovation vs property value. All of that is normal.
Today the client called me and asked us to do a Zero Rise Analysis and accompanying certification. I said, "Has the footprint changed?" and the answer was no the plans haven't changed since you did your work. So I called the building official to ask what I was missing. His answer was "The building is going to be more waterproof than it was prior to the renovation so our opinion is it could raise the flood level. It is your job to prove that it won't."
I figure this client must have really pissed the building department off, or is this a thing and I just haven't heard about it before? Somehow I am going to guess at the waterproofedness (haha) before and after renovation.
Have a laugh or offer advice (technical, social, or psychological) please and thank you.
We have been working with a client in a Zone X flood with a historic flood depth about 30" above finished floor. Our scope of work was to design the stop-log system for the door openings. Simple work, we have done this lots of times.
The overall project is just a renovation to an existing service station ~2100 square feet. Footprint of the building remains the same, they are just doing updates and renovations and tripped the requirement for floodproof design due to cost of renovation vs property value. All of that is normal.
Today the client called me and asked us to do a Zero Rise Analysis and accompanying certification. I said, "Has the footprint changed?" and the answer was no the plans haven't changed since you did your work. So I called the building official to ask what I was missing. His answer was "The building is going to be more waterproof than it was prior to the renovation so our opinion is it could raise the flood level. It is your job to prove that it won't."
I figure this client must have really pissed the building department off, or is this a thing and I just haven't heard about it before? Somehow I am going to guess at the waterproofedness (haha) before and after renovation.
Have a laugh or offer advice (technical, social, or psychological) please and thank you.