The Building Law of the City of Boston: Being Acts of 1907, Chapter 550, as Amended, Also Special Acts Relating to Buildings and Their Maintenance, Use and OccupancyBuilding department, 1915 - 229 pages |
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Page 11
... cellar floor . Height of a Building : — The vertical distance of the highest point of the roof above the mean grade of the curbs of all the streets upon which it abuts , and if it does not abut on a street , above the mean grade of the ...
... cellar floor . Height of a Building : — The vertical distance of the highest point of the roof above the mean grade of the curbs of all the streets upon which it abuts , and if it does not abut on a street , above the mean grade of the ...
Page 12
... Cellar : That part of a building more than forty per cent of which is below the grade of the street , and in third class buildings that part of the building which is below the sills . Gas fitting shall mean the work of putting together ...
... Cellar : That part of a building more than forty per cent of which is below the grade of the street , and in third class buildings that part of the building which is below the sills . Gas fitting shall mean the work of putting together ...
Page 17
... cellar or basement to the first story . No boiler shall be placed or maintained under any public way . No part of any structure , except cornices , permanent awnings , string courses , window caps and sills , bay windows , under such ...
... cellar or basement to the first story . No boiler shall be placed or maintained under any public way . No part of any structure , except cornices , permanent awnings , string courses , window caps and sills , bay windows , under such ...
Page 28
... cellar stories of first class construction . Every hotel , tenement house and lodging house hereafter erected covering more than three thousand five hundred square feet or more than five stories in height , shall be a first class ...
... cellar stories of first class construction . Every hotel , tenement house and lodging house hereafter erected covering more than three thousand five hundred square feet or more than five stories in height , shall be a first class ...
Page 29
... cellar stories shall be of first class construction , and any stairway leading from the first floor to the basement or from the basement to the cellar shall be enclosed in masonry walls not less than eight inches thick or with two ...
... cellar stories shall be of first class construction , and any stairway leading from the first floor to the basement or from the basement to the cellar shall be enclosed in masonry walls not less than eight inches thick or with two ...
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Common terms and phrases
ACT RELATIVE act shall take alley or open altered apply Approved auditorium avenue back air pipes basement beams board of appeal brick building commissioner building hereafter erected building limits building line buildings or structures cellar cellulose acetate films cement chapter three hundred Chelsea Street Bridge city of Boston columns concrete connected district doors easterly elevator exceed exceeding exit feet in height fire fireproof material fixtures floor four inches girders height of buildings hereby house hereafter erected inspection inspector iron least less than four licensing officer masonry mayor means of egress metal nineteen hundred occupied open passageway owner partition party walls passage permit person placed plaster prescribed proscenium public hall public lodging house radius of gyration registry of deeds reinforced concrete roof second class building SECT shaft stairway structure take effect tenement house hereafter theatre thereof tion trap vent ventilation waste pipe water-closet westerly window yard
Popular passages
Page 148 - Houses in the City of Boston. Be it enacted, etc., as follows: — SECTION 1.
Page 17 - In multiple dwellings hereafter erected no closet of any kind shall be constructed under any stair-case leading from the entrance story to the upper stories, but such space shall be left entirely open and kept clear and free from incumbrance.
Page 66 - Every inner court shall be provided with one or more horizontal intakes at the bottom. Such intakes shall always communicate directly with the street or yard, and shall consist of a passageway not less than three feet wide and seven feet high...
Page 12 - Every chimney flue shall be carried to a height sufficient to protect adjoining buildings from fire and smoke, and, unless the roof is covered with incombustible material, shall extend at least four feet above the highest point of contact with the roof. Every...
Page 75 - ... durable nonabsorbent material, properly sewer-connected, and with individual traps and properly connected flush tanks providing an ample flush of water to thoroughly cleanse the bowl. Each such water-closet shall be located inside the dwelling or other building...
Page 56 - Every bulkhead hereafter constructed in a tenement house shall be constructed as provided for tenement houses hereafter erected and shall have stairs with a guide or hand rail leading to the roof, and such stairs shall be kept free from encumbrance at all times. No lock shall be placed on any scuttle or bulkhead door, but either may be fastened on the inside by movable bolts or hooks.
Page 81 - Distinct and separate places of exit and entrance shall be provided for each gallery above the first. A common place of exit and entrance may serve for the main floor of the auditorium and the first gallery, provided its capacity be equal to the aggregate capacity of the outlets from the main floor and the said gallery. No passage leading to any stairway communicating with any entrance or exit shall be less than four feet in width in any part thereof.
Page 67 - ... in every tenement house hereafter erected all rooms, except water-closet compartments and bathrooms, shall be of the following minimum sizes; in each apartment there shall be at least one room containing not less than one hundred and twenty...
Page 80 - ... the exits in the ratio of one and one-half inches to five running feet. Aisles having seats on one side only, shall be not less than two feet...
Page 61 - Behind every tenement house hereafter erected, there shall be a yard extending across the entire width of the lot and at every point open from the ground to the sky, unobstructed, except that open iron fire escapes may project not over four feet from the rear line of the house.