6.7  Outdoor Lighting Compliance Documents and Acceptance Tests

This section contains information about the certificate of compliance, certificate of installation, and certificate of acceptance needed for compliance with the nonresidential outdoor lighting requirements of the Energy Code.

6.7.1      Overview

At the time a building permit application is submitted to the local enforcement agency, the applicant also submits plans and energy compliance documentation, including the certificate of compliance. The enforcement agency plan checkers examine these documents for compliance with the Energy Code

The person responsible for the construction of the lighting system should submit the certificate of installation and certificate of acceptance to the local building department or the local enforcement agency after the installation and before receiving the building occupancy permit.

6.7.2      Compliance Documentation and Numbering Scheme

The Energy Code use the following numbering scheme for the nonresidential lighting compliance documents:

NRCC             Nonresidential Certificate of Compliance

NRCI              Nonresidential Certificate of Installation

NRCA            Nonresidential Certificate of Acceptance

LTI                  Lighting, Indoor

LTO                Lighting, Outdoor

LTS                 Lighting, Sign

01                   The first set of compliance documents in this sequence

E                      Primarily used by enforcement authority

A                     Primarily used by acceptance tester

The paper prescriptive compliance documents have a limited number of rows per section for entering data. Some designs may need fewer rows, and some designs may need additional rows. If additional rows are required for a particular design, then multiple copies of that page may be used.

6.7.3      Certificate of Compliance Documents

The certificate of compliance is used to demonstrate that the overall design of the regulated building or system complies with the Energy Code requirements.

The plans examiner will be responsible for verifying that these documents are submitted with the building plans and are complete when required. See Section 2.2.2 for more information about the certificate of compliance.

The nonresidential outdoor lighting certificate of compliance includes the following:

    NRCC-LTO-E: Certificate of Compliance, Outdoor Lighting

6.7.4      Certificate of Installation Documents

The certificate of installation is used primarily to declare that what was installed matches the plans and certificates of compliance. The certificate of installation is signed by a person with an approved license.

Even if the design has errors and has specified incorrect features and devices, the installer is responsible to meet all the applicable requirements that he or she installs.

A copy of the completed signed and dated installation certificate must be posted at the building site for review by the local enforcement agency in conjunction with requests for final inspection for the building. See Section 2.2.5 for more information about installation certificates.

Before a lighting control system, including an energy management control system (EMCS), can be recognized for compliance with the lighting control requirements in the Energy Code, the person who is eligible under Division 3 of the Business and Professions Code to accept responsibility for the construction or installation of features, materials, components, or manufactured devices shall sign and submit an Installation Certificate (§130.4(b)|topic=SECTION 130.4 –LIGHTING CONTROL ACCEPTANCE AND INSTALLATION CERTIFICATE REQUIREMENTS.1 and 2).

For sign lighting controlled by a lighting control system or by an EMCS, the NRCI-LTO-02-E must be completed

The nonresidential outdoor lighting certificate of installation includes the following:

    NRCI-LTO-01-E: Certificate of Installation, Outdoor Lighting

    NRCI-LTO-02-E: Certificate of Installation, Energy Management Control

6.7.5      Certificate of Acceptance

Before an occupancy permit is granted for a newly constructed building or space, or a new lighting system serving a building, space, or site is operated for normal use, all outdoor lighting controls serving the site shall be certified as meeting the acceptance requirements for code compliance. A certificate of acceptance shall be submitted to the local enforcement agency under Administrative Regulations §10-103(a).

The acceptance requirements that apply to outdoor lighting controls include:

    Certifying plans, specifications, installation certificates, and operating and maintenance information to meet the requirements of the Energy Code.

    Certifying that outdoor lighting controls meet the applicable requirements of §110.9|topic=SECTION 110.9 – MANDATORY REQUIREMENTS FOR LIGHTING CONTROLS and §130.2|topic=SECTION 130.2 – OUTDOOR LIGHTING CONTROLS AND EQUIPMENT.

Lighting controls acceptance testing must be performed by a certified acceptance test technician, and a certificate of acceptance must be completed and submitted before the local enforcement agency can issue the certificate of occupancy. See the following Chapter 2 and Chapter 13 for additional information on compliance and enforcement, and acceptance requirements.

The nonresidential outdoor lighting certificate of acceptance includes the following:

    NRCA-LTO-02-A: Certificate of Acceptance, Outdoor Lighting Controls

6.7.6      Acceptance Testing

The primary purpose of outdoor lighting acceptance tests is to assure the lighting controls are configured properly and are functioning as expected in meeting the energy code requirements.

    The procedures for performing the lighting controls acceptance tests are documented in Reference Nonresidential Appendix NA7. See the following sections for the outdoor lighting controls acceptance testing procedures:

    NA7.8.1 for Motion Sensing Controls

    NA7.8.2 for Photocontrols

    NA7.8.5 for Automatic Scheduling Controls

See Section 2.2.7 for more information about the certificate of compliance.