Showing posts with label IS Codes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IS Codes. Show all posts

IS 1200 – Methods of Measurement - Overview

IS 1200 – Methods of Measurement - Overview

Indian Standard for Measurement

What is IS 1200?

Full Title: IS 1200 - Methods of Measurement of Building and Civil Engineering Works

Published By: Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS)

Purpose: Standardize measurement methods for construction work to ensure uniformity and avoid disputes.

Structure: 28 Parts covering different work categories

Legal Status:

  • Referenced in government contracts (mandatory)
  • Reference standard in private contracts (best practice)
  • Basis for arbitration/disputes on quantities

IS 1200 - 28 Parts:


Part 1 (1992): Earthwork

Part 2 (1974): Piling

Part 3 (1965): Cement Concrete Work (Superseded by Part 5)

Part 4 (1967): Structural Steel Work

Part 5 (1982): Concrete Work (RCC, Plain Concrete)

Part 6 (1972): Masonry (Brickwork, Stonework, Blockwork)

Part 7 (1972): Roofing and Sheeting (Tiles, Metal sheets)

Part 8 (1981): Doors, Windows and Ventilators

Part 9 (1992): Plastering, Pointing and Finishing

Part 10 (1992): Water Proofing and Damp Proofing

Part 11 (1993): Drainage Work

Part 12 (1982): Road Work

Part 13 (1983): Railway Track Work

Part 14 (1967): Underground Sewer and Water Supply

Part 15 (1968): Canal Work

Part 16 (1974): Electrical Work

Part 17 (1977): Glazing Work

Part 18 (1995): White Washing, Colour Washing, Distempering

Part 19 (1981): Reinforcement for RCC Work

Part 20 (1982): Finishing of Floors and Other Surfaces

Part 21 (1995): Dam, Aqueduct and Reservoir

Part 22 (1982): Wood Work (Carpentry and Joinery)

Part 23 (1974): Painting

Part 24 (1981): Timber Treatment

Part 25 (1982): Plumbing and Sanitary Installations

Part 26 (1983): Bridge Work

Part 27 (1987): Insulation Work (Thermal, Acoustic)

Part 28 (1981): Asbestos Cement Works


Key Parts for Building Construction:

Most Used (90% of building work):

  • Part 1: Earthwork (excavation, filling, grading)
  • Part 5: Concrete work (RCC, PCC)
  • Part 6: Masonry (brickwork, blockwork)
  • Part 9: Plastering and pointing
  • Part 10: Waterproofing
  • Part 19: Reinforcement (steel bars)
  • Part 20: Flooring
  • Part 23: Painting

Specialized (as needed):

  • Part 2: Piling (if foundation has piles)
  • Part 8: Doors and windows (if measured separately)
  • Part 22: Woodwork (if significant carpentry)
  • Part 25: Plumbing (sanitary, water supply)

How IS 1200 Works:

Each Part Contains:

  1. Scope: What work is covered
  2. Units of Measurement: m, m², m³, kg, nos, etc.
  3. General Rules: What is included in measurement
  4. Specific Rules: Item-wise measurement methods
  5. Deductions: What openings/items to deduct
  6. Exclusions: What is NOT measured
  7. Examples: Illustrative calculations

Example - IS 1200 Part 6 (Brickwork):

Scope: Measurement of brick masonry in walls, columns, arches, etc.

Unit: Cubic meter (m³) for rate contracts Square meter (m²) for item rate contracts (9" wall, 4.5" wall separately)

General Rules:

1. Measured in cubic meters (length × height × thickness)

2. No deduction for:

   - Openings up to 0.1 m² each

   - Wooden or steel members up to 0.05 m² cross-section

3. Deduct in full:

   - Openings exceeding 0.1 m² each

   - Bearings of beams, lintels

4. Add separately:

   - Raking, corbelling, curved work (if >5% extra)

5. Mortar is included (not measured separately)

6. Scaffolding is included (not measured separately)

What This Means:

Example: Wall 5m long × 3m high × 0.23m (9") thick with 1 door opening 1m × 2m

 

Gross volume: 5 × 3 × 0.23 = 3.45 m³

Door opening: 1 × 2 × 0.23 = 0.46 m² (exceeds 0.1 m², so deduct)

Net brickwork: 3.45 - 0.46 = 2.99 m³

 

Payment: 2.99 m³ @ rate per cum


Importance of Following IS 1200:

Legal:

  • Contract clause: "Measurement as per IS 1200"
  • Disputes resolved based on IS 1200 interpretation
  • Arbitrator's decision references IS 1200

Practical:

  • Uniform understanding (contractor, engineer, client)
  • No ambiguity in what's included/excluded
  • Fair payment (standardized method)

Financial:

  • Incorrect measurement = Incorrect payment
  • Knowing IS 1200 = Claiming what's rightfully yours
  • Example: Forgetting to claim raking in brickwork = 5-8% loss

IS 1200 PART 1 - EARTHWORK

Title: Measurement of Excavation and Filling

Scope: All earthwork including excavation, filling, grading, leveling, ramming.

Unit of Measurement: Cubic meter (m³)


Critical Rule 1: In-Situ Measurement

Earthwork is ALWAYS measured in the INITIAL STATE (before excavation)

 

Example:

  Excavation required: 1,000 m³ (in-situ, before digging)

  After excavation, soil swells to: 1,300 m³ (loose state, 30% swell)

 

  Payment: For 1,000 m³ ONLY

 

  You do NOT get paid for swell volume!

Rationale: Payment for actual work, not bulking due to loosening.


Critical Rule 2: Classification of Soil

IS 1200 Part 1 recognizes different soil types:

1. Ordinary Soil (Earth)

   - Easy to dig with pick and shovel

   - Example: Clay, loamy soil, sand

 

2. Hard Soil

   - Requires pick, crowbar, mechanical equipment

   - Example: Gravel, dense clay, soft murrum

 

3. Soft Rock (Disintegrated)

   - Requires mechanical equipment, some blasting

   - Example: Weathered rock, laterite

 

4. Hard Rock

   - Requires blasting

   - Example: Granite, basalt, hard sedimentary rock

Why It Matters: Different rates for different soil types (rock excavation costs 3-5× ordinary soil)

Payment:

If BOQ says: "Excavation in ordinary soil" but you encounter rock

→ Rate revision claim (extra item rate for rock)

→ Dispute avoided if soil properly classified upfront


Measurement Rules - Excavation:

1. Foundation Excavation:

Measured: Length × Width × Depth (all in meters)

 

Width measured: Trench width (foundation + working space)

  Foundation width: As per drawing

  Working space: 500mm each side (typical)

  Total width = Foundation width + 1000mm

 

Depth measured:

  From NGL (Natural Ground Level) to formation level

  OR as specified in drawings

 

Example:

  Foundation: 10m long × 1m wide × 2m deep (from NGL)

  Working space: 0.5m each side

  Measured width: 1 + 0.5 + 0.5 = 2m

 

  Excavation quantity: 10 × 2 × 2 = 40 m³

2. Basement Excavation:

Measured: Gross area × depth

 

Deductions:

  - Existing structures to remain (if any)

  - Trees beyond 0.3m girth (measured separately)

 

No deduction for:

  - Internal walls (excavate full basement, then build walls)

  - Columns, pillar bases

 

Example:

  Basement: 20m × 15m × 3m deep

  Quantity: 20 × 15 × 3 = 900 m³

3. Removal of Excavated Material:

Measured separately if distance > 50m

 

Item description specifies:

  - "Excavation and disposal within 50m"

  - "Removal beyond 50m for every additional 50m or part thereof"

 

Lead distance: Horizontal distance from excavation to disposal point

 

Example:

  Excavation: 1,000 m³

  Disposal point: 180m away

 

  Items to measure:

    1. Excavation: 1,000 m³ (up to 50m included)

    2. Extra lead (50-100m): 1,000 m³

    3. Extra lead (100-150m): 1,000 m³

    4. Extra lead (150-200m): 1,000 m³


Measurement Rules - Filling:

1. Filling Under Floors:

Measured: Area × Average thickness

 

Include:

  - Compaction (in measurement description, e.g., "in layers of 200mm")

  - Watering and ramming

 

Exclude:

  - Earth removed and re-used (filling with excavated earth)

  - Measure only EXTRA earth brought from outside

 

Example:

  Floor area: 100 m² × 0.6m thick filling

  Excavated available: 50 m³

  Required: 100 × 0.6 = 60 m³

 

  Measure filling with excavated earth: 50 m³ (free, just spreading cost)

  Measure filling with brought earth: 10 m³ (material + transport cost)

2. Backfilling Trenches:

Measured: Trench volume - Foundation volume

 

Example:

  Trench excavation: 40 m³ (from earlier example)

  Foundation (masonry/concrete): 10m × 1m × 0.5m = 5 m³

 

  Backfilling required: 40 - 5 = 35 m³

 

  If excavated soil re-used: 35 m³ backfill with excavated earth

  If not suitable: 35 m³ backfill with selected soil (brought from outside)


Common Mistakes - Earthwork:

Mistake 1: Paying for Swell

Wrong: Measure after excavation (1,300 m³ loose)

Right: Measure in-situ before excavation (1,000 m³)

Loss if wrong: 30% overpayment

Mistake 2: Not Classifying Soil

Wrong: All excavation in "ordinary soil" (but 30% is rock)

Right: Separate measurement - 700 m³ ordinary, 300 m³ rock

Impact: Rock costs 3× more, ₹(300 × ₹800) = ₹2.4 lakhs extra deserved

Mistake 3: Deducting Small Openings

Wrong: Deduct column pits from basement excavation

Right: No deduction (excavate full basement)

Loss if wrong: Under-measurement, lower payment

Mistake 4: Ignoring Working Space

Wrong: Foundation trench = foundation width only (1m)

Right: Foundation + working space (2m)

Loss if wrong: 50% under-measurement!


IS 1200 PART 5 - CONCRETE WORK

Title: Measurement of RCC and Plain Concrete

Scope: All concrete work - plain cement concrete (PCC), reinforced cement concrete (RCC), pre-stressed concrete.

Unit of Measurement: Cubic meter (m³)


Critical Rule 1: Gross Volume

Concrete is measured GROSS (including embedded items)

 

Include in concrete volume:

  - Reinforcement steel (bars, mesh)

  - Embedded pipes, conduits

  - Embedded anchor bolts, inserts

  - Formwork (shuttering) is not deducted

 

Do NOT deduct:

  - Reinforcement (even though it occupies space)

  - Small embedments

 

Example:

  RCC Column: 0.3m × 0.4m × 3.5m

  Steel inside: 8 nos 20mm dia bars + stirrups (~ 0.01 m³)

 

  Measured concrete: 0.3 × 0.4 × 3.5 = 0.42 m³ (gross, no deduction for steel)

 

  Reinforcement measured separately as per Part 19 (in kg)

Rationale: Simplicity - deducting small volumes creates complexity without significant accuracy gain.


 

Critical Rule 2: Formwork Included

Unless specified otherwise, formwork is INCLUDED in concrete rate

 

Measurement description specifies:

  - "Including cost of formwork and its removal"

  - OR separate item: "Providing and removing formwork to ___"

 

For rate analysis:

  If formwork NOT separate, include ₹450-800/m³ in concrete rate

  If formwork separate, exclude from concrete rate


Measurement Rules - Foundations:

1. Plain Cement Concrete (PCC) in Foundation:

Measured: Length × Width × Thickness

 

Example:

  Foundation: 10m long × 2m wide × 0.15m thick (PCC bed)

 

  Quantity: 10 × 2 × 0.15 = 3.0 m³

 

  Item description: "Plain cement concrete M15 grade in foundation

  including formwork, compaction, curing as per IS 456"

2. RCC Footings:

Measured: As per individual footing dimensions

 

For isolated footings:

  Each footing: Length × Width × Depth

  Total: Sum of all footings

 

Example:

  10 footings, each 2m × 2m × 0.5m

  Per footing: 2 × 2 × 0.5 = 2.0 m³

  Total: 10 × 2.0 = 20 m³


Measurement Rules - Columns:

Measured: Cross-section × Height

Height measured:

  From: Top of footing/plinth

  To: Soffit of beam above (underside of beam)

 

  NOT to top of beam (that's part of beam)

 

Example:

  Column: 0.3m × 0.4m cross-section

  Number of columns: 20

  Floor height: 3.5m (floor to soffit of beam)

 

  Per column: 0.3 × 0.4 × 3.5 = 0.42 m³

  Total G.F. columns: 20 × 0.42 = 8.4 m³

 

  Item: "RCC M30 in columns including formwork" = 8.4 m³

Deductions:

No deduction for:

  - Reinforcement steel

  - Openings/recesses < 0.1 m² cross-section

 

Deduct:

  - Large recesses/openings > 0.1 m² (rare in columns)


Measurement Rules - Beams:

Measured: Cross-section × Length

Length measured:

  For independent beams: Center to center of supports

  For continuous beams: Full length (don't deduct column widths)

 

Height measured:

  From: Top of slab (if monolithic)

  To: Soffit of beam

 

  If beam is independent: Full depth

 

Example:

  Beam: 0.3m wide × 0.5m deep (below slab)

  Length: 5m (between column centers)

  Number: 10 beams

 

  Per beam: 0.3 × 0.5 × 5 = 0.75 m³

  Total: 10 × 0.75 = 7.5 m³

Monolithic Beam-Slab:

Beam and slab cast together (most modern construction)

 

Measure beam:

  Width × Depth (excluding slab thickness) × Length

 

Measure slab:

  Area × Thickness (full area, no deduction for beam width)

 

Example:

  Room: 5m × 4m

  Slab: 0.15m thick

  Beam (on all 4 sides): 0.3m wide × 0.5m deep

 

  Slab: 5 × 4 × 0.15 = 3.0 m³

  Beams:

    2 beams (5m long): 2 × (0.3 × 0.5 × 5) = 1.5 m³

    2 beams (4m long): 2 × (0.3 × 0.5 × 4) = 1.2 m³

    Total beams: 2.7 m³

 

  Total concrete: 3.0 + 2.7 = 5.7 m³


Measurement Rules - Slabs:

Measured: Area × Thickness

Area: Gross area (no deduction for beams if monolithic)

 

Deductions:

  - Openings > 0.5 m² (e.g., staircase opening, lift well)

  - Skylights, large vents

 

No deduction for:

  - Openings < 0.5 m² (small vents, pipes)

  - Beams (if monolithic)

  - Columns passing through

 

Example:

  Slab: 10m × 8m × 0.15m thick

  Opening (staircase): 2m × 1.5m = 3 m² (deduct)

  Small vent: 0.4m × 0.4m = 0.16 m² (don't deduct)

 

  Gross: 10 × 8 = 80 m²

  Less opening: 3 m²

  Net area: 77 m²

 

  Quantity: 77 × 0.15 = 11.55 m³


Measurement Rules - Special Items:

1. Sunken Slabs:

Measured separately (different level)

 

Example:

  Bathroom slab sunken by 300mm for waterproofing

  Area: 2m × 1.5m

  Thickness: 0.15m

  Sunk depth: 0.3m

 

  Regular slab: 2 × 1.5 × 0.15 = 0.45 m³

  Plus sides: 2(2 + 1.5) × 0.3 × 0.15 = 0.315 m³

 

  OR measure as separate item: "RCC in sunken slab" = 0.77 m³

2. Staircases:

Measured: Developed area (following slope) × Average thickness

 

OR: Volume calculation (waist slab + treads)

 

Example:

  Flight: 10 treads, 0.25m tread, 0.15m rise

  Width: 1.2m

  Waist slab thickness: 0.15m

 

  Slope length: √(10×0.25)² + (10×0.15)² = 2.92m

  Area: 2.92 × 1.2 = 3.5 m²

  Concrete: 3.5 × 0.15 = 0.525 m³

 

  Plus treads volume if separate

3. Chajjas, Sunshades:

Measured: Area × Thickness

 

Include projection in area

 

Example:

  Chajja: 5m long × 0.6m projection × 0.1m thick

  Quantity: 5 × 0.6 × 0.1 = 0.3 m³


IS 1200 PART 6 - MASONRY WORK

Title: Measurement of Brickwork and Blockwork

Scope: Brick masonry, stone masonry, cement block masonry in walls, columns, arches.

Unit of Measurement: Cubic meter (m³) for rate contracts
OR Square meter (m²) for item rate contracts specifying wall thickness


Critical Rule 1: Openings Deduction

Deduct openings ONLY if each exceeds 0.1 m²

 

Examples:

 

Door opening: 1m × 2m = 2 m² → DEDUCT (>0.1 m²)

Window opening: 1.2m × 1.5m = 1.8 m² → DEDUCT (>0.1 m²)

Small vent: 0.3m × 0.3m = 0.09 m² → DON'T DEDUCT (<0.1 m²)

Pipe hole: 0.15m × 0.2m = 0.03 m² → DON'T DEDUCT (<0.1 m²)

 

Rationale:

  Small openings require cutting, wastage → labor compensates for material saved


Critical Rule 2: Mortar Included

Brickwork measurement includes mortar

 

Item description: "Brickwork in CM 1:6" means:

  - Bricks

  - Cement mortar 1:6

  - Laying, jointing

  - Scaffolding

  - Curing

 

Do NOT measure cement and sand separately for mortar

(Already included in brickwork rate)


Measurement Rules - Walls:

1. External Walls:

Measured: Length × Height × Thickness

 

Length:

  Outside to outside (for external walls)

  OR centerline method (explained later)

 

Height:

  From: Top of plinth/floor

  To: Bottom of roof slab/ceiling

 

Thickness:

  As per specification (9", 4.5", 13.5")

  In meters: 9" = 0.23m, 4.5" = 0.115m, 13.5" = 0.345m

 

Example:

  External wall: 15m long × 3m high × 0.23m (9") thick

  2 windows: Each 1.2m × 1.5m = 1.8 m² (DEDUCT)

  1 door: 1m × 2m = 2 m² (DEDUCT)

 

  Gross: 15 × 3 × 0.23 = 10.35 m³

  Less windows: 2 × (1.2 × 1.5 × 0.23) = 0.828 m³

Less door: 1 × 2 × 0.23 = 0.46 m³ Net brickwork: 10.35 - 0.828 - 0.46 = 9.062 m³

 

2. Internal Walls:

Measured: Length × Height × Thickness

Length: Wall to wall (for partition walls) OR centerline of walls

Deductions:

  • Door openings (internal doors typically 0.9m × 2m = 1.8 m² → DEDUCT)

Example: Internal wall: 4m long × 3m high × 0.115m (4.5") thick 1 door: 0.9m × 2m = 1.8 m²

Gross: 4 × 3 × 0.115 = 1.38 m³ Less door: 0.9 × 2 × 0.115 = 0.207 m³ Net: 1.17 m³

 

Centerline Method (Shortcut for Complex Plans):

Concept:

Instead of calculating each wall separately with junctions, use total centerline length.

 

Formula:

Brickwork = Centerline length × Height × Thickness

 

Example:

Room: 5m × 4m (external dimensions) Wall thickness: 0.23m (9") Height: 3m No openings

Method 1 - Individual walls: 2 walls (5m long): 2 × 5 × 3 × 0.23 = 6.9 m³ 2 walls (4m long): 2 × 4 × 3 × 0.23 = 5.52 m³ BUT: Overlap at corners (counted twice) Correction needed: Complex

Method 2 - Centerline: External perimeter: 2(5 + 4) = 18m Centerline: 18m (measured at center of wall)

Brickwork: 18 × 3 × 0.23 = 12.42 m³ ✓ Accurate

 

When to Use:

- Complex plans with many walls

- Multiple rooms with junctions

- Saves time, reduces errors

 

When NOT to Use:

- Walls of different thickness (need separate calculation)

- Many openings (deduct individually anyway)

 

Measurement Rules - Special Items:

 

1. Raking/Corbelling:

Measured separately if significant (>5% extra)

Raking: Sloped brickwork (gables, ramps) Corbelling: Projecting courses

Example: Gable end: Triangular brickwork Base: 5m, Height: 2m, Thickness: 0.23m Area: 0.5 × 5 × 2 = 5 m² Volume: 5 × 0.23 = 1.15 m³

Item: "Raking in brickwork" = 1.15 m³ @ higher rate (+15-20%)

 

2. Arches:

Measured: Developed length × Width × Thickness

Developed length: Following curve

Example: Semi-circular arch over door Span: 1m, Width (wall thickness): 0.23m Thickness of arch: 0.23m

Developed length: Ï€ × 1 ÷ 2 = 1.57m Volume: 1.57 × 0.23 × 0.23 = 0.083 m³

 

3. Curved Walls:

Measured: Curved length × Height × Thickness

Use flexible tape to measure curve OR calculate from radius

Extra rate for curvature (more labor, wastage)

 

Common Mistakes - Masonry:

 

Mistake 1: Deducting Small Openings

Wrong: Deduct every vent, pipe hole Right: Deduct only openings >0.1 m² Impact: Under-measurement by 2-5%

 

Mistake 2: Measuring Mortar Separately

Wrong: Measure bricks, then cement, then sand for mortar Right: Brickwork includes everything (just measure brickwork) Impact: Confusion, potential double-counting

 

Mistake 3: Forgetting Corner Overlaps

Wrong: Measure all 4 walls full length → Corners counted twice Right: Use centerline method OR deduct overlap Impact: Over-measurement by 5-8%

 

Mistake 4: Wrong Thickness Conversion

Wrong: 9" wall = 0.25m (rough approximation) Right: 9" = 9 × 0.0254m = 0.2286m ≈ 0.23m (accurate) Impact: 8% error in thickness → 8% error in quantity

 

HOW TO MEASURE PLINTH AND CARPET AREA OF BUILDINGS AS PER IS CODE IS 3861 : 2002

 MEASUREMENT OF PLINTH AND CARPET AREA AS PER IS: 3561 (2002)

GENERAL

The areas of each of the following categories shall be measured separately and shall not be clubbed together:

a) Basement

b) Floor without cladding ( stilted floor)

c) Floors including top floor which may be partly covered

d) Mezzanine floor including addl. floor for seating in assembly building/ theatre, auditorium, etc

e) Garage

f) Accommodation for service staff

g) Stair cover ( mumty )

h) Machine room;

g) Porch and

h) Towers, turrets, domes projecting above the terrace level at terrace.

MEASUREMENT OF PLINTH AREA

Plinth area shall mean the built-up covered measured at the floor level of the basement or of any storey. For the purpose of plinth area, following shall be included:

a) Area of the wall at the floor level excluding plinth offsets, if any; when the building consists of columns projecting beyond cladding, the plinth area shall be taken up to the external face of cladding ( in case of corrugated sheet cladding outer edge of corrugation shall be considered )

NOTE — In case. a common wall is owned jointly by two owners, only half the area of such walls shall be included in the plinth area of one owner.

b) Shafts for sanitary, water supply installations, garbage chute, telecommunication, electrical, fire fighting, air-conditioning and lifts

c) Stair case

d) In case of open verandah with parapets:

  1. 100percent areas for the portion protected by the projections above, and
  2.  50 percent area for the portion unprotected from above.

e) 100 percent area of the balcony protected by projection above and 50 percent area of the unprotected balcony; and

f) In case of alcove made by cantilevering a slab beyond external wall:

  1. 25 percent of the area for the alcove of height up to 1 m,
  2. 50 percent of the area for the alcove of height more than 1m and upto 2 m, and
  3. 100 percent of the area for the alcove of height more than 2 m.

The following shall not be included in the plinth area 

a) Area of loft
b) Area of architectural band, cornice, etc
c) Area of vertical sun breaker or box louver projecting out and other architectural features, for example slab projection for flower pot, etc;
d) Open platform;
e) Terrace;
f)) Open spiral/service stair cases; and
g) Area of mumty, machine room, towers, turrets, domes projecting above terrace level.

MEASUREMENT OF CARPET AREA

Carpet area shall mean the floor area of the usable rooms at any floor level

(A) From the plinth area as worked out above, the area of the wall shall be deducted ( see below). Thickness of wall shall be inclusive of finishes.
(NOTE — The various dimensions could be measured internally or externally.)

The following shall be included in the wall area:
a)Door and other openings in the wall;
b) Pillars, intermediate pillars, supports or any other such obstruction within the plinth area irrespective of their location;
c) Plaster along wall exceeding 300 cm2 in area;
d) Flues which are within the wall;
e) Built-in cupboard, almirah and shelf appearing within a height of 2.2 m from floor; and
f) Fire place projecting beyond the face of the wall in living or bed room.

The following shall be excluded from the wall area:

a) Plaster along wall not exceeding 300 cm2 in area, and
b) Chullah platform projecting beyond the face of the wall.

 (B) The carpet area shall be the area worked out as in (A) excluding the area of the following portion:

a) Verandah;
b) Corridor and passage;
c) Entrance hall and porch;
d) Staircase and stair-cover ( mumty ) ( see Note);
e) Shaft and machine room for lift;
f) Bathroom and lavatory;
g) Kitchen and pantry;
h) Store;
j) Canteen;
k) Air-conditioning duct and plant room; and
m) Shaft for sanitary/water supply installations and garbage chute, electrical and fire fighting, air-conditioning, telecommunication, lift.

NOTE — In a hall or basement, areas of portion I m beyond last step shall be part of the staircase.

The carpet areas of category mentioned in General (above) -  b), e), g), h), k) and m) are not required to be calculated.

MEASUREMENT OF RENTABLE AREA

Rentable area shall mean the carpet area at any floor level including areas mentioned below

Residential Buildings

 The rentable area shall be carpet area as worked out in 5 but shall further include the following:

a) The carpet area of kitchen, pantry, store, lavatory, bath room; and

b) Fifty percent of carpet area of unglazed and 100 percent of glazed verandah.

 It shall, however, exclude the carpet area of the covered portion of the building  such as storage space on top landings of staircase, under first landing and waist slab on floor one.

Non-Residential Buildings

The rentable area shall be carpet area increased by the carpet area of the canteen including store, kitchen and pantry attached to it.

It shall, however, not include carpet areas of bathroom and lavatory.

Balcony

A horizontal projection with a hand-rail, balustrade or a parapet, to serve as passage or sitting out place.

Mezzanine Floor

An intermediate floor in between two main floors having minimum height of 2.2 m from the floor and having a proper and permanent access to it.

NOTE — Where rules of the local bodies permit intermediate floor of minimum 1.8 m clear height, these be also considered as mezzanine floor for the purpose of measurement.

Stair Cover ( Mumty )

Itis a structure with a roof over a staircase and its landing, built to enclose only the stairs for the purpose of providing protection from weather and not used for human habitation.

 Loft

A structure providing intermediate storage space in between two main floors without having a permanent access and at a height not less than 2.0 m from the floor below.

Porch

It is a covered structure supported on pillars or otherwise for the purpose of pedestrian or vehicular approach to a building.


















IS CODES FOR DOORS, WINDOWS, GRILLS & SHUTTERS (FREE DOWNLOAD)

 IS CODES FOR DOORS, WINDOWS, GATES AND SHUTTERS 

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Disclaimer: The attached codes are for Educational reference and noncommercial purposes only. For Latest Reaffirmed copies, visit Bureau of Indian Standards website: standardsbis.bsbedge.com.

IS 1003 (Part 1):2003 - Timber panelled and glazed shutters – Specification Part - 1: Door Shutters       (Download)

IS 1003 (Part 2):1994 - Timber panelled and glazed shutters - Specification Part - 2: Window and ventilator shutters       (Download)

IS 1038:1983 - Specification for steel doors, windows and ventilators       (Download)

IS 1081:1960 - Code of practice for fixing and glazing of metal (steel and aluminium) doors, windows and ventilators        (Download)

IS 1361:1978 - Specification for steel windows for industrial buildings       (Download)

IS 1948:1961 - Specification for aluminium doors, windows and ventilators         (Download)

IS 1949:1961 - Specification for aluminium windows for industrial buildings         (Download)

IS 2191 (Part 1):1983 - Specification for wooden flush door shutters (cellular and hollow core type): Part -1: Plywood face panels         
(Download)

 

IS 2191 (Part 2):1983 - Specification for wooden flush door shutters (cellular and hollow core type): Part -2: Particle board and hardboard face panels       (Download)

IS 2202 (Part 1):1999 - Specification for wooden flush door shutters (solid core type): Part 1 Plywood face panels         (Download)

IS 2202 (Part 2):1983 - Specification for wooden flush door shutters (solid core type): Part 2 Particle board and hardboard face panels        (Download)

 

IS 4020:1998 - Door shutters – Methods of tests:

·         Part- 1: General

·         Part- 2: Measurement of dimensions and squareness

·         Part -3: Measurement of general flatness

·         Part -4: Local planeness test

·         Part -5: Impact indentation test

·         Part- 6: Flexure test

·         Part -7: Edge loading test

·         Part -8: Shock resistance test

·         Part -9: Buckling resistance test

·         Part -10: Slamming test

·         Part -11: Misuse test

·         Part -12: Varying humidity test

·         Part -13: End immersion test

·         Part -14: Knife test

·         Part -15: Glue adhesion test

·         Part -16: Screw withdrawal resistance test

                                                  All Parts  1 - 16 : (Download)
 

IS 4021:1995 - Timber door, window and ventilator frames – Specification       (Download)

IS 4043:1969 - Recommendations for symbolic designations of direction of closing and faces of doors, windows and shutters         (Download)

IS 4351:2003 - Steel door frames – Specification        (Download)

IS 4913:1968 - Code of practice for selection, installation and maintenance of timber doors and windows       (Download)


IS 6198:1992 - Specification for ledged, braced and battened timber door shutters      
(Download)

 

IS 6248:1979 - Specification for metal rolling shutters and rolling grills     (Download)

IS 10428:1983/ ISO 1804:1972 - Glossary of terms relating to doors       (Download)

IS 10451:1983 - Specification for steel sliding shutters (top hung)       (Download)

IS 10521:1983 - Specification for collapsible gates       (Download)

IS 14856:2000 - Glass fibre reinforced plastic (GRP) panel type door shutters for internal use – Specification      (Download)

IS 15380:2003 - Moulded raised high density fibre (HDF) panel doors – Specification      (Download)

TENDERING & CONTRACT MANAGEMENT Part - IX Contract Award Procedures

TENDERING & CONTRACT MANAGEMENT  Part - IX Contract Award Procedures PART 1: LETTER OF AWARD (LoA)  1.1 Understanding Letter of Award ...