The 5 Construction Types Every Builder Must Know
For estimators: Type IA (high-rise) = $20/sf structure vs Type VB (wood retail) = $8/sf.
For PMs: Wrong type = plan exam reject (8 weeks lost).
For foremen: Dictates gypsum type/thickness before ordering truckloads.
BCNYS Table 601 classifies buildings by fire-resistance ratings (hours the structure survives fire). Understanding which type your project falls under is the single biggest variable in your structural budget. Get it wrong and you’re either way over-budget or facing a code rejection that stops your project cold.
| Type | Primary Structure | Exterior Walls | Common Use | 7-Eleven Fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IA | 3-hr concrete/steel | 3-hr | High-rise | Overkill |
| IIA | 1-hr steel | 1-hr | Mid-rise office | Unlikely |
| IIIB | 2-hr bearing wood, 0-hr non-bearing | 2-hr | Strip malls | Possible |
| VB | 0-hr combustible | 0-hr | Small retail/SIP | Best fit |
Your 5,000 sf standalone 7-Eleven is typically Type VB: unprotected combustible (SIPs = wood-based). But certain elements within the building still require fire ratings regardless of the overall type.
What a Fire-Rated Assembly Actually Is
A fire-rated assembly is a wall, floor, or ceiling that has been laboratory-tested to survive fire for a specified duration. The test (ASTM E119 / UL 263) applies 1,000°F heat to one side for the rated period while measuring structural integrity, flame passage, and temperature rise on the other side.
Critical point: You don’t invent your own rated assembly. You select one from a tested design (like a UL design number) that tells you the exact layers, stud size, spacing, and fastening pattern. Deviation from that recipe voids the rating.
7-Eleven Rated Elements: Where Ratings Apply in Type VB Retail
Even in a Type VB building, certain conditions force fire ratings:
- Party walls to apartments above: 2-hour separation (UL U419)
- Exit stair enclosures: 1-hour (if applicable)
- Storefront returns at rated walls: 1-hr fire-rated glazing (Pyrostop or equal)
- Floor/ceiling assembly above: 1-hour UL V451 (if habitable space above)
- Mechanical shafts: 1-hour minimum
Estimator’s Detailed Bid Template: Fire-Rated Assemblies
| Assembly | Rating | Layers/Materials | sf | $/sf Mat | $/sf Lab | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party wall | 2-hr UL U419 | 2×4 studs @24″oc, dbl 5/8″ Type X, 1″ screws staggered | 2,000 | $3.50 | $2.00 | $11,000 |
| Floor/ceiling sep | 1-hr UL V451 | 5/8″ gyp + resilient channel @16″oc | 5,000 | $2.00 | $1.50 | $17,500 |
| Fire-rated glazing | 1-hr | Pyrostop panels in rated frame | 80 | $95 | $25 | $9,600 |
| Total | $38,100 |
Pro tip: Buy Type X gypsum in 54″ x 12′ sheets ($15/sheet). Volume discount at 200+ sheets: negotiate 10% off with your drywall supplier.
Foreman’s Install Sequence: Rated Wall (UL U419)
- Frame studs 24″ o.c. (UL specifies 24″—16″ fails the test criteria)
- Hat channels top and bottom for deflection allowance
- First layer gypsum: 5/8″ Type X, 1″ Type S screws, 12″ edge/8″ field
- Second layer gypsum: Stagger joints minimum 16″ from first layer
- Tape and mud: USG Sheetrock fire-rated joint compound only
- Gaps: No gaps >1/8″ at floor or ceiling; fire caulk all seams
- Inspect: Laser level entire plane; photograph for record
- Penetrate only after rating confirmed: Firestop all openings before inspecting
Toolbox training script: “Type X has glass fibers baked in—it holds together longer in fire. Double layer = code minimum. Check screw embed: 5/8″ minimum into stud. Measure every third screw on a random bay.”
Spot the Mistakes: Rated Wall Field Failures
- Mistake #1: 1/2″ regular gypsum on “fire wall.” Rating: 0-hr. Tear-out cost: $5,000.
- Mistake #2: Studs at 16″ o.c. on UL U419. Test void. Re-frame: $3,000.
- Mistake #3: Single layer 5/8″ Type X. Half the required rating. Redesign: $4,000.
- PM pitfall: No UL# on drawings. Plan exam rejects. Demand UL numbers from architect pre-bid.
SIPs in a Type VB World: What You Need to Know
SIPs (OSB/EPS/OSB) are classified as combustible under BCNYS Table 602. Type VB allows unprotected combustible exterior walls, so SIP panels are permitted for the main shell. However:
- Interior rated assemblies (party walls, floor separations) must still use gypsum/tested systems
- SIPs used as structural roof deck must meet uplift/snow load per engineer’s design
- Crane sets panels fast (1 day vs 3-5 stick-frame), but joints must seal for energy code
Pro move: Download the UL Fire Resistance Directory app (free). Search “U419” = instant PDF with exact thicknesses, fasteners, and approved manufacturers. Train your apprentice: “Show me U419 fastener requirements.” If they can’t answer, they’re not working on that rated wall.
Why Getting Construction Type Right Wins Retail Projects
Type VB keeps your structural cost at $8-10/sf versus $18-22/sf for Type IIA steel. On a 5,000 sf 7-Eleven, that’s a $50,000 swing. Bid the right type, include only the ratings that code forces (egress, separations), and you have a lean, competitive number. Include unnecessary ratings and you lose the job. Miss required ratings and you eat change orders or fail inspections.
Builder wisdom: Print BCNYS Table 601 wallet-size. Laminate it. Every supervisor on site should know construction type before framing starts. Quiz your foremen: “What’s the stud spacing on a UL U419 party wall?” (24″ o.c.) Correct answer means they can lead the crew without supervision.
Takeaway: Construction type = the budget foundation. Fire-rated assemblies = tested recipes you don’t deviate from. Spec the right type, build the right assemblies, document the UL numbers, and your inspections become formalities instead of firefights.
