ERP, IGH, Labour Code: three regimes to orchestrate
Your office floor falls under the regulations applicable to workplaces for its permanent occupants. It shifts to a 5th-category ERP as soon as it welcomes the public, then to 3rd or 4th category beyond the defined thresholds (decree of 25 June 1980). It comes under the IGH regulation from 50 metres for the tertiary sector (article R.122-2 of the Construction and Housing Code). A coworking space open to the public in a 75-metre tower falls simultaneously under all three regimes.
| Framework | Switch threshold | Indicative review timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Workplaces | Permanent occupants | No prior review |
| ERP 5th category | Public reception | about 4 months |
| Tertiary IGH | 50 m in height | 5 to 6 months + commission |
Article R.4227-5 also conditions the maximum capacity of a floor on the number of passage units: a single emergency staircase of 1.40 to 1.50 m allows 100 people per floor. This constraint guides your decisions on partitioning, smoke extraction, fire resistance, accessibility for people with reduced mobility and signage.
For the Architect and the Office Manager, the ERP threshold is a programming decision. A freely accessible showroom, a public event space or a coworking space without access control shifts your project into ERP status, with about 4 additional months of review. Conversely, invitation-only access with a control airlock keeps your floor under the workplace regime alone. This usage choice, made from the programme stage, conditions your opening date as much as the choice of flooring.
A limit to be aware of. On an exclusively tertiary floor below the IGH threshold, activating an ERP workflow as a precaution adds 3 to 4 months without justification. ERP reclassification is triggered only from a demonstrated public use, never from a mere hypothesis of future evolution.