Door at top or bottom of stairs
Hi. I am finishing off a two storey house build.
One thing I have been thinking about is unwanted transfer of heat/cold and noise up/down the stairwell. There are just two of us, and we will live predominantly upstairs, so I’m thinking it will be wasteful to not be able to constrain our artificial heating or cooling to upstairs.
I’m thinking maybe I should remodel the wall to add a door at top or bottom.
Both doors would open outwards into free space.
I have asked building-trade people if this is permitted and have received different and contradictory answers. Is there anyone here who has access to the relevant legislation and is able to answer this?
I know there are more complications - like how it will feel to the user - but I’ll deal with those once I’ve found just what is permitted.
Cheers
Arron
Door at top or bottom of stairs
The answer to your question is contained within the National Construction Code - Volume 2 section 3.9.1.5 Landings. This is free to download and view if you want.
Short answer is …..
750mm long landing at the top of the stairs between the doorway and risers (if more than 3 risers).
There doesn’t seem to be a requirement for the bottom of the stairs.
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...7adea32152.jpg
Door at top or bottom of stairs
If it’s at the top of the staircase it doesn’t matter if the door swings in or out, you need a landing with a minimum length of 750mm from the top riser to the door. The intention is to give you time to realise that you are about to encounter a staircase shortly after opening the door.
That being said, if you had a 750mm landing, and an 820 leaf door, when you go up the stairs and arrive on your landing, it would be an awkward squeeze as you tried to open the door whilst not having to step back on the stairs again. A better solution would be to extend the landing to 1000mm or open the door away from the stair.