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Developments in performance-based building codes and standards

Foliente, G. C.
2000
Forest Products Journal, Vol. 50, No. 7/8


Foliente, G. C., (2000), "Developments in performance-based building codes and standards", Forest Products Journal, Vol. 50, No. 7/8.
Abstract:
In the past, most building codes and standards have used prescriptive (or compliance) criteria. In recent years, there has been strong interest worldwide in developing codes and standards that are more performance based.

A prescriptive approach describes an acceptable solution while a performance approach describes the required performance. In order to clarify the difference between these two approaches, it will be helpful to use an example. Consider the goal of fire safety in a building. In order to achieve this goal, a prescriptive code would specify what materials the structural frame of the building should be or should not be made of. Whereas a performance-based code might state that the building structure should be able to withstand a fire long enough for the occupants to escape safely, but would not "prescribe" exactly what materials must be or must not be used. Therefore, if it can be demonstrated that a given set of materials would achieve the goal of fire safety, those materials would be accepted under a performance-based code.

Prescriptive criteria are straightforward for a builder or designer to follow, easy for a third party to check, and relatively easy for building regulators to enforce. However, there are some fundamental difficulties associated with the use of prescriptive criteria and these problems have increased the interest in the development of performance-based codes and standards.

The most serious problem with the prescriptive approach is that it serves as a barrier to innovation. Improved and/or cheaper products may be developed, yet their use might not be allowed if construction is governed by prescriptive codes and standards. One example of this is the development of base isolation systems that protect buildings from expensive and life-threatening damages during earthquakes. Widespread application and adoption of these systems soon after they were first developed in the 1960s would have saved many lives and reduced economic damages from earthquakes. But prescriptive code requirements hampered and greatly delayed their adoption.

The author is Project Leader and Principal Research Scientist, CSIRO Building, Construction

and Engineering, Melbourne, Australia; and also the Coordinator of the CIB Proactive Program on Performance Based

References

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11. Foliente, G.C., R.H. Leicester, and L. Pham. 1998. Development of the CIB proactive program on performance based building codes and standards. BCE Doc 98/232. CSIRO Building, Construction, and Engineering, Highett, Australia.

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25. World Trade Organization. 1997. First Triennial Review of the Operation and Implementation of the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade, Document G/TBT/5 Attachment, Committee on Technical Barriers to Trade, WTO, Geneva, Switzerland.inator of the CIB Proactive Program on Performance Based Building; greg.foliente@ dbce.csiro.


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