Hey tony, in Part K (extract below) you can get away with a fixed ladder if just the one habitable room, a ships ladder I suppose, do you know what the relevant BS or similar for that might be?If you are going up 3m, you would need 14 risers, = 13 treads; there is no way you would get any compliant staircase within 1m x 0.8m. Even an alternating tread stair would need to be very steep (and dangerous).
BS 5395 Part 4 (stairs for limited access) is worth a read. For a single-room loft conversion (or a single room basement conversion), you can have traditional stairs with treads as shallow as 180mm, as long as the pitch is no more than 50.7°, at least 600 wide and with handrails both sides.Hey tony, in Part K (extract below) you can get away with a fixed ladder if just the one habitable room, a ships ladder I suppose, do you know what the relevant BS or similar for that might be?
1.32You may use a fixed ladder – with fixed handrails on both sides – only for access in a loft conversion that contains one habitable room, and only when there is not enough space without alteration to the existing space for a stair that satisfies the guidance for dwellings in paragraphs 1.2–1.24.
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