Why Occupancy Classification Matters More Than You Think
For estimators: Wrong occupancy = wrong fire protection budget (sprinklers add $4-6/sf).
For PMs: Dictates permitting timeline and inspections.
For foremen/builders: Tells you exactly how many exits to frame and how wide.
Every building gets classified by use under the 2020 Building Code of New York State (BCNYS). A 7-Eleven? That’s Group M – Mercantile: retail where customers browse and buy merchandise like snacks, drinks, and lottery tickets.
The ripple effect:
- Max occupants: 100 gross sf/person (so 5,000 sf store = ~50 people).
- Egress: 0.2″ clear width per occupant (10″ total for 50 people).
- Sprinklers: Required if >12,000 sf fire area (your 5k sf standalone = likely no, but check mixed-use).
- Travel distance: Max 250 ft to exit (unsprinklered) or 200 ft (sprinklered).
Real-World 7-Eleven Breakdown
Scenario: Ground-floor retail in a 4-story mixed-use.
- Group M triggers 2 means of egress if >50 occupants.
- Front door + rear emergency exit = minimum.
- No sprinklers if standalone <12k sf, but fuel islands might force them (check NFPA 30A).
Estimator Checklist
- Confirm occupancy from plans (M, B, R, etc.).
- Calculate occupant load (sf/person from Table 1004.5).
- Price egress: doors ($1.5k ea), panic hardware ($800/door), exit signs ($150 ea).
- Add sprinklers if triggered ($4/sf installed).
Estimator’s Bid Template: Group M Retail
| Category | Line Item | Unit | Qty | $/Unit | Total | Code Driver |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egress | 36″ x 84″ rated steel door w/ panic hardware | ea | 2 | $2,500 | $5,000 | 0.2″/occ |
| Egress | LED exit signs (battery backup) | ea | 4 | $150 | $600 | Section 1013 |
| Sprinklers | Quick-response heads + piping (if triggered) | sf | 5,000 | $4.50 | $22,500 | Table 903.2.7 |
| Alarms | Manual pull stations + horn/strobes | ea | 2 | $800 | $1,600 | Section 907.2.7 |
| Subtotal | $29,700 |
Field Execution: Foreman’s 5-Step Checklist
- Day 1 framing: String line travel distances (max 250 ft). Flag issues before concrete.
- Rough-in coordination: Frame door openings 44″ clear (not nominal 36″—hardware eats space).
- Hardware install: Panic bars on rear exit (code-mandated for M>50 occ); free egress (no key locks).
- Signage: Exit signs 7.7-8′ AFF; photoluminescent if power fails.
- Final: Post “Max Occ: 50” sign at entrance (Brookhaven req).
Crew training script (10 min toolbox talk): “Group M means customers anywhere. Egress isn’t optional—it’s math. 50 people x 0.2″ = 10″ clear. Two 44″ doors cover it. Measure twice, frame once.”
Spot the Mistakes: Real Pitfalls Exposed
- Mistake #1: Single 36″ rear door on 6,000 sf store. Fail: Only 7″ clear width (needs 12″). Fix: Add second door ($2.5k).
- Mistake #2: No panic hardware on emergency exit. Fail: Code mandates for M>50. Fix: $800/door.
- Mistake #3: Travel >250 ft (forgot corner cooler). Fail: Redesign layout ($10k).
- Pitfall for PMs: Fuel sales = ancillary Group M hazard. DEC permit separate; delays CO 30 days.
Why Group M Retail Bids Win (or Lose) on This
Retail like 7-Eleven has high public access + flammable stock (cardboard displays, cleaners). Code assumes worst-case: fire starts in stockroom, 50 customers evacuate. Your bid must front-load life safety—don’t lowball assuming “small store, basic exits.”
Builder’s wisdom: Print Table 1004.5 occupant factors. Quiz subs: “7-Eleven sf/person?” (100 gross). Pass = code-ready crew.
Takeaway: Occupancy = risk profile. Nail Group M early, and your $120/sf bid includes $6/sf safety buffer. Miss it, eat change orders.
