Source: https://app.leg.wa.gov/RCW/default.aspx?cite=19.27&full=true
Timestamp: 2019-05-20 09:19:22
Document Index: 188005479

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 1', '§ 2', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 2', '§ 6', '§ 6', '§ 101', '§ 17', '§ 302', '§ 9', '§ 28', '§ 63', '§ 1']

19.27.010 Short title.
19.27.015 Definitions.
19.27.020 Purposes—Objectives—Standards.
19.27.031 State building code—Adoption—Conflicts—Opinions.
19.27.035 Process for review.
19.27.040 Cities and counties authorized to amend state building code—Limitations.
19.27.042 Cities and counties—Emergency exemptions for housing for indigent persons.
19.27.050 Enforcement.
19.27.060 Local building regulations superseded—Exceptions.
19.27.065 Exemption—Temporary growing structures used for commercial production of horticultural plants.
19.27.067 Temporary worker housing—Exemption—Standards.
19.27.070 State building code council—Established—Membership—Travel expenses.
19.27.074 State building code council—Duties—Public meetings—Timing of code changes.
19.27.076 State building code council—Open public access information technologies.
19.27.080 Chapters of RCW not affected.
19.27.085 Building code council account—Building permit fee.
19.27.087 Building permit and plan review fees—Agricultural structures.
19.27.090 Local jurisdictions reserved.
19.27.095 Building permit application—Consideration—Requirements.
19.27.097 Building permit application—Evidence of adequate water supply—Authority of a county or city to impose additional requirements—Applicability—Exemption—Groundwater withdrawal authorized under RCW 90.44.050.
19.27.100 Cities, towns, counties may impose fees different from state building code.
19.27.110 International fire code—Administration and enforcement by counties, other political subdivisions and municipal corporations—Fees.
19.27.111 RCW 19.27.080 not affected.
19.27.113 Automatic fire-extinguishing systems for certain school buildings.
19.27.120 Buildings or structures having special historical or architectural significance—Exception.
19.27.140 Copy of permit to county assessor.
19.27.150 Report to department of enterprise services.
19.27.160 Counties with populations of from five thousand to less than ten thousand—Ordinance reenactment.
19.27.170 Water conservation performance standards—Testing and identifying fixtures that meet standards—Marking and labeling fixtures.
19.27.175 Recycled materials—Study code and adopt changes.
19.27.180 Residential buildings moved into a city or county—Applicability of building codes and electrical installation requirements.
19.27.190 Indoor air quality—Interim and final requirements for maintenance.
19.27.490 Fish habitat enhancement project.
19.27.500 Nightclubs—Automatic sprinkler system—Building code council shall adopt rules.
19.27.510 "Nightclub" defined.
19.27.520 Building constructed, used, or converted to nightclub—In accordance with chapter.
19.27.530 Carbon monoxide alarms—Requirements—Exemptions—Adoption of rules.
19.27.540 Electric vehicle infrastructure requirements.
19.27.550 Accessible parking space access aisles.
19.27.560 International Wildland Urban Interface Code.
19.27.570 Mass timber products—Building construction.
(1) "Agricultural structure" means a structure designed and constructed to house farm implements, hay, grain, poultry, livestock, or other horticultural products. This structure may not be a place of human habitation or a place of employment where agricultural products are processed, treated, or packaged, nor may it be a place used by the public.
(2) "City" means a city or town.
(4) "Multifamily residential building" means common wall residential buildings that consist of four or fewer units, that do not exceed two stories in height, that are less than five thousand square feet in area, and that have a one-hour fire-resistive occupancy separation between units.
(5) "Residential building permit" means a building permit issued by a city or a county to construct, enlarge, alter, repair, move, demolish, or change the occupancy of any building containing only dwelling units used for independent living of one or more persons including permanent provisions for living, sleeping, eating, cooking, and sanitation, and structures accessory to dwelling units, such as detached garages and storage buildings.
[ 2018 c 207 § 1; 2009 c 362 § 2; 1996 c 157 § 1; 1985 c 360 § 1.]
The building code council shall:
(1) By July 1, 2019, adopt a revised process for the review of proposed statewide amendments to the codes enumerated in RCW 19.27.031; and
[ 2018 c 207 § 2; 1989 c 266 § 6.]
19.27.076
State building code council—Open public access information technologies.
[ 2018 c 207 § 6.]
Building permit application—Evidence of adequate water supply—Authority of a county or city to impose additional requirements—Applicability—Exemption—Groundwater withdrawal authorized under RCW 90.44.050.
(1)(a) Each applicant for a building permit of a building necessitating potable water shall provide evidence of an adequate water supply for the intended use of the building. Evidence may be in the form of a water right permit from the department of ecology, a letter from an approved water purveyor stating the ability to provide water, or another form sufficient to verify the existence of an adequate water supply. An application for a water right shall not be sufficient proof of an adequate water supply.
(b) In a water resource inventory area with rules adopted by the department of ecology pursuant to RCW 90.94.020 or 90.94.030 and the following water resource inventory areas with instream flow rules adopted by the department of ecology under chapters 90.22 and 90.54 RCW that explicitly regulate permit-exempt groundwater withdrawals, evidence of an adequate water supply must be consistent with the specific applicable rule requirements: 5 (Stillaguamish); 17 (Quilcene-Snow); 18 (Elwha-Dungeness); 27 (Lewis); 28 (Salmon-Washougal); 32 (Walla Walla); 45 (Wenatchee); 46 (Entiat); 48 (Methow); and 57 (Middle Spokane).
(c) In the following water resource inventory areas with instream flow rules adopted by the department of ecology under chapters 90.22 and 90.54 RCW that do not explicitly regulate permit-exempt groundwater withdrawals, evidence of an adequate water supply must be consistent with RCW 90.94.020, unless the applicant provides other evidence of an adequate water supply that complies with chapters 90.03 and 90.44 RCW: 1 (Nooksack); 11 (Nisqually); 22 (Lower Chehalis); 23 (Upper Chehalis); 49 (Okanogan); 55 (Little Spokane); and 59 (Colville).
(d) In the following water resource inventory areas with instream flow rules adopted by the department of ecology under chapters 90.22 and 90.54 RCW that do not explicitly regulate permit-exempt groundwater withdrawals, evidence of an adequate water supply must be consistent with RCW 90.94.030, unless the applicant provides other evidence of an adequate water supply that complies with chapters 90.03 and 90.44 RCW: 7 (Snohomish); 8 (Cedar-Sammamish); 9 (Duwamish-Green); 10 (Puyallup-White); 12 (Chambers-Clover); 13 (Deschutes); 14 (Kennedy-Goldsborough); and 15 (Kitsap).
(h) For the purposes of this subsection (1), "water resource inventory areas" means those areas described in chapter 173-500 WAC as of January 19, 2018.
(4) Buildings that do not need potable water facilities are exempt from the provisions of this section. The department of ecology, after consultation with local governments, may adopt rules to implement this section, which may recognize differences between high-growth and low-growth counties.
(5) Any permit-exempt groundwater withdrawal authorized under RCW 90.44.050 associated with a water well constructed in accordance with the provisions of chapter 18.104 RCW before January 19, 2018, is deemed to be evidence of adequate water supply under this section.
[ 2018 c 1 § 101; 2015 c 225 § 17; 2010 c 271 § 302; 1995 c 399 § 9; 1991 sp.s. c 32 § 28; 1990 1st ex.s. c 17 § 63.]
19.27.560
19.27.570
Mass timber products—Building construction.
(1) As used in this section, "mass timber products" means a type of building component or system that uses large panelized wood construction, including:
(d) Laminated strand timber;
(e) Dowel laminated timber;
(f) Laminated veneer lumber;
(g) Structural composite lumber; and
(h) Wood concrete composites.
(2) The building code council shall adopt rules for the use of mass timber products for residential and commercial building construction. Rules adopted for the use of mass timber products by the state building code council must consider applicable national and international standards.
[ 2018 c 29 § 1.]