Problems We Solve
Converting Building Use
Changing your building’s occupancy or use requires fire and life safety solutions that satisfy code—without unnecessary costs.
The Challenge of Adapting Existing Buildings
Converting an office to residential, a warehouse to a brewery, or retail to medical use triggers new fire and life safety requirements. Changes in occupancy can require added sprinkler protection, upgraded alarms, revised egress paths, or new fire-resistance separations—costs that can escalate fast in an existing structure.
Change-of-use projects aren’t reviewed like new construction. Code officials must evaluate modern requirements against real-world existing conditions, and prescriptive solutions rarely fit neatly into older buildings.
The result is a familiar challenge: meeting today’s codes while working within the physical and financial limits of a building never designed for its new purpose.
Why Change of Use Creates Code Issues
Converting building occupancy triggers fire protection requirements that complicate projects:
- New occupancy classification drives new requirements – A change to residential, assembly, laboratory, healthcare, or other higher-risk uses can trigger upgraded fire protection, egress capacity, fire ratings, and system performance thresholds.
- Existing building constraints limit what’s possible – Structural capacity, ceiling heights, utility locations, and building layout constrain where you can add required sprinklers, fire barriers, or egress components.
- Determining required upgrades isn’t always straightforward – Under the IEBC, not every existing condition must be brought up to “new construction” standards—but which elements must be upgraded depends on occupancy change, hazard level, and the chosen compliance path.
- Prescriptive solutions don’t fit – Standard IBC/IFC requirements assume new construction. Existing buildings may not meet those provisions without extensive work, requiring engineering judgment, alternative methods, or performance-based solutions.
- Cost uncertainty – Without clear fire protection requirements defined early, renovation budgets get blindsided by expensive retrofits or modifications discovered mid-project.
- Historical code compliance paths – In some cases, a change of use can allow compliance under the code adopted at the time of original construction. Determining what code edition applied and correctly interpreting older requirements (which may be structured differently than today’s codes) can be a challenge on its own.
How Summit Fire Solves Change of Use Problems
We identify the fire and life safety implications of your new occupancy, evaluate existing conditions, and develop code-compliant paths that work within the constraints of your building. Our engineers prepare the documentation AHJs need to approve your conversion—without unnecessary upgrades.
What we deliver:
- Code analysis – Clear determination of which fire and life safety requirements apply to your new occupancy and how they impact the existing structure.
- Existing system evaluation – Assessment of current fire protection systems and identification of what can remain, what must be modified, and where upgrades are required.
- Alternative means and methods – When prescriptive requirements are impractical or cost-prohibitive, we develop performance-based or engineered solutions that AHJs routinely accept.
- Cost-conscious compliance solutions – We help prioritize fire protection upgrades and explore IEBC compliance options to meet code without exceeding renovation budgets.
- System design for retrofits – Sprinkler, fire alarm, and related system designs tailored to existing building constraints—including limited ceiling heights, structural limits, and fixed layouts.
- Existing conditions evaluation – On-site inspection of current fire and life safety systems and construction to assess feasibility, identify code compliance gaps, and define the most effective path forward for your conversion.
We’ve successfully navigated change of use approvals for office-to-residential conversions, warehouse adaptive reuse projects, retail-to-assembly transformations, and more. Our experience with existing building code provisions and alternative compliance methods helps you achieve your conversion without overspending on fire protection.
Convert Your Building the Right Way
Let us assess your change of use requirements and develop fire protection solutions that work within your building and budget.