Anonymous wrote:Add a window. 5k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds fine to me. Teenage boys are not that picky. It has a door to the outside, so it’s safe.
No, a door to the garage is not a door to the outside. Fire could be in the garage. Outside means literally that--outside.
Although my SIL's house has a basement bedroom, one side of the basement has sliding windows to the outside but it's on the other side. I'm trying to think if the bedroom even has windows, let alone egress windows. . . I do remember that when they bought it there was no deck outside the kitchen sliding windows which were one story off the ground, the first thing they did was build the deck.
OP here
Ok, but if the fire was in the garage, couldn't he just go up the stairs to the kitchen and exit there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds fine to me. Teenage boys are not that picky. It has a door to the outside, so it’s safe.
It is not safe and you are an idiot. I suggest you read the fire code. Opening a door when there is a fire creates an inferno.
"If the door is completely cool, open it cautiously. Put your shoulder against the door and open it slowly.
A fire that has died down for lack of oxygen can flare up when a supply of fresh air rushes through the door you open.
If heat or smoke enters the room, slam the door and make sure it is closed securely."
Anonymous wrote:My biggest concern with it would be the location and type of furnace the house has. If it’s an oil furnace in the basement then hard no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds fine to me. Teenage boys are not that picky. It has a door to the outside, so it’s safe.
No, a door to the garage is not a door to the outside. Fire could be in the garage. Outside means literally that--outside.
Although my SIL's house has a basement bedroom, one side of the basement has sliding windows to the outside but it's on the other side. I'm trying to think if the bedroom even has windows, let alone egress windows. . . I do remember that when they bought it there was no deck outside the kitchen sliding windows which were one story off the ground, the first thing they did was build the deck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds fine to me. Teenage boys are not that picky. It has a door to the outside, so it’s safe.
No, a door to the garage is not a door to the outside. Fire could be in the garage. Outside means literally that--outside.
Although my SIL's house has a basement bedroom, one side of the basement has sliding windows to the outside but it's on the other side. I'm trying to think if the bedroom even has windows, let alone egress windows. . . I do remember that when they bought it there was no deck outside the kitchen sliding windows which were one story off the ground, the first thing they did was build the deck.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds fine to me. Teenage boys are not that picky. It has a door to the outside, so it’s safe.