ENFP 431 - Building Safety and the Law (3 credits)
|
Photo courtesy of Andrew Neviackas ('06) & Danielle Leikach ('06) |
Prerequisites:
- None.
Textbooks:
- None.
Course Description:
- Responding to natural and manufactured building hazards requires a complex legal environment, including regulation and liability. Key topics include the use of model codes, administrative regulation, retrospective codes, federal preemption, arson, performance based codes, risk-based regulation, engineering malpractice, product liability and disaster investigation.
Course Objectives:
- This is a course in the interaction between the law and the safety of the built environment.
- The course examines the technical, social and cultural factors that are relevant to the legal decisions made in regulating building safety.
Topics Covered:
- The Legal Framework For Building Safety Regulation:
- nature of the legal system.
- Police powers and public safety.
- Regulatory Effectiveness Analysis:
- turning public policy into a regulatory system.
- determination of public policy legal structures.
- technical tools.
- administrative vs. legislative approaches.
- optimization of response to risk.
- The Legal Structure Of Building Regulation:
- The development of building regulatory systems.
- the relationships among the various codes.
- philosophical and other differences between among structures.
- Precaution vs. Responsibility.
- Permits vs. Inspections.
- The concept of the authority having jurisdiction (AHJ).
- Adminstrative Adoption Of Codes And Standards.
- Code Development - The Technical Structure Of Codes:
- The technical tools used in codes.
- model codes, standards and test methods
- acceptance of new technologies in the legal environment.
- static and dynamic fire protection systems.
- fire safety systems approach.
- role of building, inhabitants, emergency personnel.
- The Engineer As Expert:
- Building litigation and ethics.
- Daubert and the concept of Expertise.
- professionalism, the nature of expert knowledge, witness or decision maker, duty to the client, duty to the public.
- ethical questions and designing for the problem or designing to the code.
- Federalism, States And Conflict Of Laws.
- Code Enforcement And Compliance.
- Retrospective Codes:
- Applying New Codes To Existing Buildings: changes in technological knowledge; changes in public policy and regulatory control vs. constitutional taking.
- New Approaches To Safety Regulation: Mathematical modeling, risk analysis, performance based codes, fire scenarios.
- Political vs. technical decision making.
- Legal Aftermath Of Disasters: Criminal And Regulatory: Cause and origin of Disaster, root cause analysis; rebuilding after disaster; which code?
- Legal Aftermath Of Disasters: Liability: Civil liability, Negligence, products liability.
Other Parts Of The Legal System That Impact On Buildings: The Anti-trust laws and their effect on codes. (Foam Plastic, Hydrolevel v. ASME) Rights and obligations of builder, landlord, tenant, consumer Fire retarded plywood; Architectural barriers, Americans with Disabilities act, OSHA.
[ Explore More Fire Protection Engineering Courses ]

