avenirv
New Member
what natural light do you get at night ?
isn't night something dark ?
isn't night something dark ?
So, is a den with a window a bedroom?Frankly, and speaking personally, a room without a window is not a bedroom but a den.
I was under the impression, under the rental apartment code, that bedrooms should have access to natural light.
[The correct answer]
For an apartment building in Ontario that conforms to a residential building exceeding 600 sq.m. in building area or exceeding three stories in height you have to first look to a different Part of the Code (other than Part 9). See Parts 3, 5 and 6 of Div. B.
Specifically see. Article 3.7.2.1. Window Area: (1) Except as provided in Sentences (2) and (3) or otherwise permitted, every room used for sleeping in any building, and every principal room such as living room, dining room or combination of them in dwelling units shall be provided with windows having areas conforming to Part 9, except that Article 9.7.1.3 does not apply.
Therefore Article 9.7.1.3 does not apply which states that "except where a door on the same floor level as the bedroom provides direct access to the exterior, every floor level containing a bedroom in a suite shall be provided with at least 1 outside window that..." Looking only this sentence you would think that if there is a balcony door in an apartment building dwelling (that conforms to Parts 3, 5 and 6 of Div B.) then a bedroom does not legally need a window.
This is not so if your building exceeds 600 sq.m. in building area or exceeding three stories in height
see 9.7.1.2 for Minimum Window Areas and then Table 9.7.1.2. For a bedroom the minimum glass area in 5% of area served.
I would think that if a developer is representing an illegal bedroom as a bedroom you might have some legal recourse if you bought the unit and did not know better at the time. Marketing tactic - sure - but nonetheless it appears to at least be deceiving and perhaps fraudulent. The product is improperly labelled. The developer should know better.
One caveat: the "otherwise permitted" language in Article 3.7.2.1 may suggest that each room does not need a window since it could be "otherwise permitted" for some reason. To the best of my knowledge there is no place where this is otherwise permitted except in the case of maybe a glass door (but I can't find any Article to support that statement). Transparent doors and panels are defined in the code and nowhere that I can see is this equated with a window. Contact a building code expert in your city to clarify.