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Created on LEED Interpretation

ID#

li-5219

Credit NameEQc5 - Indoor chemical & pollutant source control
Credit CategoryIndoor environmental quality
International ApplicableNo
Campus ApplicableNo

Rating System

LEED BD+C: New Construction, LEED O+M: Existing Buildings, LEED ID+C: Commercial Interiors, LEED BD+C: Core and Shell, LEED BD+C: Schools

Rating System Version

v3 - LEED 2008, v2 - Schools 2007, v2 - LEED 2.2, v2 - LEED 2.0

Inquiry

Our project is a large destination resort, with hotel and timeshare components. For all the frequently used entry locations, except these ones explained below, we will provide either permanently installed grate products or removable mats (with documented maintenance regimen) of the required dimensions. Our questions address entryway systems at the following two specific entrance locations. Location 1: Beachfront restaurant: The dining areas for a freestanding beachfront restaurant are under cover and open-air without enclosing walls on three sides, with the wall of the enclosed kitchen on the fourth side. The floor surface in some areas is beach sand; in others it is sandstone, basalt and limestone. Entryways between the adjacent hardscape, beach areas and lawn, and the dining areas, extend along much of the perimeter of the dining areas. Because of the indoor-outdoor character of the dining areas, open access along the perimeter, and the sand flooring, we propose not to include an entryway system between the dining areas and the "outside,\' and we propose to include the required entryway system between the dining areas and the kitchen to keep sand and other particles from being brought into the kitchen. Is this approach acceptable? Location 2: Meeting room area: The resort includes a small conference center which is a pavilion within a courtyard accessible only through the public areas of the hotel. The courtyard includes covered hardscape walkways and uncovered landscaped and hardscaped areas. Because the courtyard and the conference center are accessible only through the public areas of the hotel, entrances to which have compliant entryway systems, is it acceptable not to have entryway systems at the doorways between the covered exterior walkways and the meeting rooms that comprise the conference center?

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