Pete,
The previous few versions of ADB allowed you more freedom in interpreting them in this respect and it was a logical step for everyone who applied tables 7 or 8 to take into account the loss of a storey exit when there was no requirement to lose a whole staircase (e.g. lobby approach). That tied the vertical assessment in nicely with the horizontal assessment.
But the calculations were always a bit fiddly and people often didn't get them right or forgot to discount a storey exit anyway.
People also argued that the discounting of a single storey exit throughout the whole building didn't have a lot of effect on the final outcome anyway. Ok, by not discounting a storey exit the stair widths would tend to be marginally smaller but it was felt that they would often default up to the same result anyway.
Also, it was recognised that tables 7 and 8 are based on a lot of assumptions that aren't always applicable and yet time has demonstrated that stair widths derived from these tables usually provide satisfactory means of escape. Therefore, the conclusion was that the tables probably err far on the side of safety anyway so there was some leeway to be had.
And how could that leeway be had? Well, lose the fiddly method for discounting a storey exit when no staircase need be lost. In other words, lose a storey exit for assessing exit widths for horizontal means of escape but don't bother to lose the storey exit for sizing the staircases.
My pal Andy Kelly enquired a few times of the authors of ADB how we should reconcile the discrepancy but, to my knowledge, the reply never came. I guess it languished a while on the too difficult pile then one day quietly slipped into the bin.
So staircase calcs are much easier now than they used to be. Except when it comes to schools, it appears. I didn't know that BB100 had resurrected the lose a storey exit method - I bet they didn't mean to!
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Well, just had a look at it and there it is. Put in, apparently, quite deliberately. So, use that method for schools - it errs on the side of safety (which is what we want for the little darlings, isn't it?) - and use the simpler ADB method for all other buildings.....I guess.
The worked example in BB100, if done the ADB method, would have a figure of 315 per stair instead of the 350 and the result would be:
w = (315 + (15x3) - 15)/(150 +(50 x 3)) = 1.15 m a bit smaller than the BB100 figure of 1.267 m
In the circumstances you find yourself in, I wouldn't be surprised if FRS people are still using the old lose-a-SE method while BCOs have more quickly moved on to accept that you no longer have to.
If you compare the methods on some very short buildings, by the way, you can get some very large differences between the results.
Incidentally, BS 5588 part 11 has always had worked examples that do not discount a storey exit for assessing staircase widths and that has always been out of line with the horizontal means of escape. ADB does have a strong tendency to follow the 5588s.
Stu