DGM
Skeptic not Atheist
Maybe it should be merged into (or onto) another thread?I think we should start a thread for Shek to elucidate his "four-storey factory buildings are highrises!" theory...![]()
Maybe it should be merged into (or onto) another thread?I think we should start a thread for Shek to elucidate his "four-storey factory buildings are highrises!" theory...![]()
I think we should start a thread for Shek to elucidate his "four-storey factory buildings are highrises!" theory...![]()
Actually as far as I can tell, you are the only one asking this question. So I would say no "bedunkers" want to know.Are you lying?I don't know, DGM. If it was part of another thread, would that be enough to make it the whole thread?? 9/11 bedunkers want to know...
![]()
Actually as far as I can tell, you are the only one asking this question. So I would say no "bedunkers" want to know.Are you lying again?
Actually as far as I can tell, you are the only one asking this question. So I would say no "bedunkers" want to know.Are you lying?
Not my theory...why all the lies Ergo?
You would know. As far as I can tell you are the only one that knows what a "bedunker" is. Is it fun in your world?Right. Because, in bedunker logic, it's being part of a thread actually makes it the whole thread.![]()
![]()
You would know. As far as I can tell you are the only one that knows what a "bedunker" is.
Is it fun in your world?
How do your sources define "highrise," shek?![]()
A bedunker is someone who pretends to debunk things, but can't.
Why don;t you read them and find out...
The International Building Code (IBC 2000) and the Building Construction and Safety Code, NFPA 5000TM-2002, define high-rise buildings as buildings 75 feet or greater in height measured from the lowest level of fire department vehicle access to the floor of the highest occupiable story.
According to the current Philadelphia Building and Fire codes, buildings with occupied floors located more than 75’ above the lowest level of fire department vehicle access are considered a high rise.
A multi-story structure between 35-100 meters tall, or a building of unknown height from 12-39 floors.
Okay, but just this once.
The International Building Code (IBC 2000) and the Building Construction and Safety Code, NFPA 5000TM-2002, define high-rise buildings as buildings 75 feet or greater in height measured from the lowest level of fire department vehicle access to the floor of the highest occupiable story.
Same deal different twoof.According to the current Philadelphia Building and Fire codes, buildings with occupied floors located more than 75’ above the lowest level of fire department vehicle access are considered a high rise.
A multi-story structure between 35-100 meters tall [fits!], or [<<<pay special attention to that word!] a building of unknown height from 12-39 floors.
measured from the lowest level of fire department vehicle access
more than 75’ above the lowest level of fire department vehicle access
What is street level?
Can I have other common terms for $200?
Or maybe the average height of a fire truck.$50 says Ergo is trying to say they are measuring from the ceiling of the first floor. Pure, unadulterated, straw grasping.
Or maybe the average height of a fire truck.
![]()