[PDF] [PDF] Guidelines for Acoustical Ceiling Materials - Washington State

Acoustical Ceiling Materials Guideline for Healthcare Facilities Below are This list does not include all acoustical ceiling tiles Clean Room FL (Mylar) NR



Previous PDF Next PDF





[PDF] Clean Room™ MyLaR, Clean Room VL, VL - Sweets Construction

Fire Guard: a fire resistive ceiling when used in applicable UL assemblies ASTM E1264 Classification 1715, 1716, 1720, 1721 – Type IV, Form 2, Pattern G H



[PDF] 3044 Clean Rm Mylar DS_109:103_104 CleanRoom

Clean Room Mylar with Clean Room 1-1/2" Exposed Tee grid Clean Room VL Unperforated Fire Guard: A fire resistive ceiling when used in applicable UL 



[PDF] HumiGuard® Ceiling Panel - Armstrong World Industries

MYLAR, cLEAN ROOM vL, cREAtE Armstrong® Commercial Ceiling products with HumiGuard Max and HumiGuard Plus performance have a ten (10) year 



[PDF] Clean Room MYLAR, Clean Room VL & VL - LEEDuser

See warranty information at armstrong com/ceilings Application Considerations Clean Room MYLAR If acoustical absorption is required, specify a combination 



[PDF] Guidelines for Acoustical Ceiling Materials - Washington State

Acoustical Ceiling Materials Guideline for Healthcare Facilities Below are This list does not include all acoustical ceiling tiles Clean Room FL (Mylar) NR



[PDF] Overview brochure Armstrong main solutions - GreenSpec

Ceiling tiles ability to perform without sagging 90 Mineral Academy Merit / 24 Academy Diploma 24 Adria / Casa 22 Bioguard / Mylar / Parafon Hygien 26



[PDF] Armstrong Ceiling Tiles How-To - Dem-Con

Armstrong Mylar □ Fully-packaged ceiling tiles meeting the above criteria NOT ACCEPTABLE FOR RECYCLING:



[PDF] warranty, installation and maintenance 105 - Armstrong

Before Armstrong ceiling materials are installed, the units (ceiling panels or tile) should be per- mitted to reach Mylar-faced ceilings are less affected by mois-



[PDF] CGC Ceiling Tile Cross Reference - BC Ceilings

COMMERCIAL CEILING TILE PRODUCT INDEX Clean Room Mylar Border Unit (Class 100) 3 COMMERCIAL CEILINGS NUMERICAL INDEX 524 1 583

[PDF] myp design guide

[PDF] myp guide language and literature

[PDF] myp ib visual art process journal

[PDF] myp language acquisition phases

[PDF] myp language acquisition unit plans

[PDF] myp language and literature guide

[PDF] myp visual arts units

[PDF] mypsa aa

[PDF] myriade maths 3ème

[PDF] myself essay for housewife

[PDF] myservices.equifax.ca activation code

[PDF] mysolo401k calculator

[PDF] mysql cheat sheet pdf

[PDF] mysql interview questions pdf

[PDF] mysql workbench apple

DOH 505-079 April 2011 Ref. WAC 246-320-500 & 2010 FGI Section 2.1-7.2.3.4 Acoustical Ceiling Materials Guideline for Healthcare Facilities Below are pre-approved ceiling materials the department studied and found to comply with the

2010 Guidelines for Design and Construction of Health Care Facilities and the Washington State Retail Food Code.

This list does not include all acoustical ceiling tiles. You must submit materials not listed to Construction Review

Services for review and approval prior to installation

1. Non-restricted spaces: Department approval is not required.

These areas include: lobby, waiting room, restrooms and non-restricted corridors.

2. Patient care areas: Ceiling finishes must be easily cleanable with routine housekeeping equipment.

Acoustic and lay-in ceilings, where used, must not create ledges or crevices or interfere with infection

control.

These areas include: clean utility/supply/linen, soiled utility/holding, nourishment, pharmacy, central

services, laboratories, patient rooms, nurse's stations, recovery, xray, exam, morgue,/autopsy, storage,

chronic dialysis, coronary care, intensive care, labor and delivery rooms, work areas for storage and

processing of instruments, and nurseries.

3. Dietary and laundry areas: Ceiling finish must be smooth, scrubbable, nonabsorptive, nonperforated,

durable, and capable of withstanding cleaning with chemicals. The ceiling tiles must be installed with a

rust-free grid, and weigh at least one pound per square foot or you must gasket or clip down the ceiling to

prevent the passage of particles from the cavity above the ceiling plane. These areas include: food preparation, food storage, ware washing, and laundry areas.

4. Semi-restricted areas: Ceiling finishes must be smooth, scrubbable, nonabsorptive, nonperforated,

durable and capable of withstanding cleaning with chemicals, and without crevices that can harbor mold

and bacterial growth. The department does not accept perforated, tegular, serrated cut, or highly textured

tiles. The lay-in ceiling tiles must weigh at least one pound per square foot, or you must gasket or clip

down the ceiling to prevent the passage of particles from the cavity above the ceiling plane.

These areas include: airborne infection isolation rooms, clean corridors, clean core, scrub sink areas,

central sterile supply spaces, specialized radiogra phic rooms, NICU, decontamination rooms, minor surgical procedure rooms, and class A operating rooms.

5. Restricted areas: The department does not allow acoustic ceiling tiles. Ceilings must be of monolithic

construction. You cannot have cracks or perforations in these ceilings. Ceiling finishes must be scrubbable

and capable of withstanding cleaning and/or disinfecting chemicals. You must gasket or seal all access

openings in these ceilings. These areas include: operating rooms, sterile core and protective environment rooms.

The department recommends you gasket or clip down lay-in ceilings to prevent passage of particles from the cavity

above the ceiling plane into the room's environment. You must paint and/or seal exposed cut tile edges. Take special

precautions during installation and maintenance activities of ceiling tiles to ensure you do not compromise infection

control.

If tiles are nonporous, or if moisture is due to small stream leak, they can be cleaned as per manufacturer's

recommendation, or cleaned with dilute hypochlorite and air dried before replacement. If major water damage

occurs and porous tiles are not removed and dried within 24 to 48 hours, you should discard and replace the tiles.

All ceiling finishes must comply with NFPA 101.

DOH 505-079 April 2011 Ref. WAC 246-320-500 & 2010 FGI Section 2.1-7.2.3.4

NR:noDOHrequirement

NP:notpermitted

X:Acceptable

1

NonͲ

Restricted

2

Patient

CareAreas

3

Dietary&

Laundry

4 Semi restricted 5

Restricted

Armstrong

CleanRoomFL(Mylar)NRXXXNP

CleanRoomVLUnperforatedNRXXXNP

VLPerforatedNRXNPNPNP

CortegaNRXNPNPNP

DuneNRXNPNPNP

FineFissuredNRXNPNPNP

HealthZone/CleanRoomUltimaNRXX*NP

MesaNRXNPNPNP

HealthZone/CleanRoomOptima

Ͳwithfoilbacking&paintededgeNR

NR XNP NPNP NPNP NP

OptimaOpenPlank

Ͳwithfoilbacking&paintededgeNR

NR XNP NPNP NPNP NP

TundraNRXNPNPNP

UltimaNRXNPNPNP

Certainteed

AdagioNRXNPNPNP

BaroqueNR*NPNPNP

EcophonGedinaA,E NRXNPNPNP

EcophonHygieneProtectA NRX**NP

EnviroguardNRXXXNP

FineFissuredNR*NPNPNP

SandMicroNRXNPNPNP

SymphonyGNRX**NP

SymphonyMNRXX*NP

TufCoreNRXNPNPNP

VinylrockNRXXXNP

VinylShieldA,CNRX**NP

USGINTERIORS

Mars(ClimaPlus)NRXX*NP

RockFace(ClimaPlus).NRXNPNPNP

Touchstone(ClimaPlus)NRXNPNPNP

Astro(ClimaPlus)NRXNPNPNP

NATIONALGYPSUM

GridstoneandHiͲstrengthNRX**NP

GridstoneCleanroomNRX**NP

quotesdbs_dbs17.pdfusesText_23