How does PEC meet ADA, IBC and OSHA interior codes?
Process Equipment & Controls (PEC) meets ADA, IBC, and OSHA interior codes by combining licensed professional engineering with rigorous safety procedures. Every project undergoes multi-disciplinary design reviews, stamped drawings, and on-site inspections to verify clearances, signage, ergonomics, and structural integrity before commissioning, ensuring full regulatory compliance and safe, accessible operation.
PEC’s compliance strategy begins in the proposal phase, where its licensed mechanical, electrical, and structural engineers map project requirements to the latest editions of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), the International Building Code (IBC), and applicable OSHA standards.
CAD models incorporate proper aisle widths, hand-rail heights, guard loads, and accessible reach ranges; any custom platform or control panel is designed to meet ADA clear floor space and IBC structural loading criteria. For OSHA alignment, PEC’s safety team conducts Job Safety Analyses and specifies approved fall-arrest anchors, non-slip walking surfaces, lockout/tagout points, and high-visibility identification labels.
All drawings are PE-stamped and submitted for authority-having-jurisdiction (AHJ) review. During fabrication, PEC uses UL-listed components and performs factory acceptance tests that simulate worst-case loads. Field technicians then install the equipment, execute OSHA-mandated safety orientations, and document the installation with as-built measurements.
A final walkthrough with the customer confirms that ramps, stairs, and controls are fully accessible and code-compliant, giving clients a regulation-ready solution.