Navigating Seismic Compliance & High-Piled Storage Permitting

Expedite facility approvals and mitigate legal liability with engineered racking frameworks compliant with strict RMI, IBC, and local municipal seismic codes.

The Cost of Code Non-Compliance

In active seismic zones, particularly across the West Coast, unpermitted or non-compliant pallet racking exposes operations to severe legal liability and the risk of immediate facility shutdown by fire marshals.

Navigating the municipal permitting process for High-Piled Combustible Storage is often the primary bottleneck delaying facility launch or expansion. Approval requires a rigorous demonstration of structural integrity under lateral seismic forces.

Engineering Variables

Critical Variables for Seismic Approval

01

Slab Capacity & Anchorage

The racking structure is only as strong as its foundation. A rigorous evaluation of the existing concrete slab thickness and compressive strength (PSI) is required to ensure it can withstand the point loads and pull-out forces exerted during a seismic event.

02

Site-Specific Seismic Coefficient

Seismic engineering is not universal. Structural requirements are dictated by the facility’s exact GPS coordinates and soil classification, which determine the site-specific seismic coefficients (Ss and S1 values) used in the load calculations.

03

Commodity Classification

What you store is as important as how you store it. Plastics, aerosols, and flammable liquids carry higher hazard classifications, directly altering the structural rack design to accommodate more aggressive fire suppression architectures.

Core Technical Specifications

Systems installed in seismic zones require substantially larger base plates, heavy-duty anchoring protocols (e.g., wedge or epoxy anchors), and potentially moment frames or reinforced structural bracing to resist lateral ground motion.

Racking systems exceeding 12 feet in height trigger High-Piled Storage regulations. Approvals are contingent upon maintaining engineered flue spaces (longitudinal and transverse) and integrating in-rack fire suppression systems dictated by the specific commodity classification.

A successful municipal submission requires a comprehensive documentation package, including facility site plans, egress path verification, rack elevation drawings, and dynamic structural calculations stamped by a state-licensed Professional Engineer (PE).

Download the Seismic Permitting SOP

Bypass bureaucratic delays and minimize engineering revision cycles. Access our standardized checklist for High-Piled Storage permits, detailing required structural calculations, CAD drawings, and municipal submission protocols.