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Built for Hazardous Environments
Facilities handling flammable liquids, hazardous chemicals, and regulated materials require engineered storage, containment, and emergency equipment designed around NFPA, OSHA, IFC, EPA, and ANSI requirements. Explore solutions placed within real-world environments to see how compliant design supports safer, inspection-ready operations.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Extraction and Processing Safety
Yes. Our solutions are built for high-hazard extraction and processing environments where flammable liquids, solvent vapors, compressed gases, and hazardous chemicals are part of daily operations. They support compliance with NFPA, OSHA, IFC, and insurer requirements for fire protection, hazardous material storage, and workplace safety.
We support safety and compliance across solvent storage rooms, extraction suites, post-processing areas, labs, warehouses, and loading docks. Our solutions help standardize flammable storage, spill containment, and emergency equipment placement across the facility.
Yes. We provide storage and safety solutions for solvent-based operations and classified hazardous locations, including Class I Division 1 and Division 2 areas. This includes compliant storage cabinets, safe handling systems, vapor control, static grounding, and approved gas cylinder storage.
Our products are engineered for demanding industrial and production environments. They are designed to withstand heavy use, equipment movement, chemical exposure, temperature changes, and routine washdowns while maintaining performance and compliance.
Our solutions support compliance with OSHA, NFPA, IFC, EPA SPCC, and ANSI standards. They are designed for proper flammable liquid storage, spill containment, hazard communication, static control, gas cylinder storage, and emergency safety equipment placement.
Yes. Even when certain products are regulated at the state level, workplace safety and fire protection standards still apply. Facilities must follow codes adopted by state and local authorities, including NFPA standards, the International Fire Code, and OSHA requirements.
Flammable solvents must be stored in approved containers and safety cabinets with proper labeling and separation from incompatible materials. Codes may also require limits on storage quantities, ventilation, and approved dispensing methods. Always confirm requirements with NFPA standards and local fire codes.
MAQs are based on the material type, physical state, and occupancy classification of the space. Facilities total the quantity in a control area, compare it to code limits, and apply requirements such as rated storage, separation distances, and spill containment. Always verify MAQs against local fire code requirements.
Fire-rated storage buildings are often required when facilities store large volumes of flammable or combustible liquids, especially near processing or production areas. Requirements depend on chemical type, quantity, and local fire codes. Always confirm with your Authority Having Jurisdiction, or AHJ.
Learn how flammable storage buildings differ from flammable cabinets.
Start by identifying the chemicals being stored, the quantities involved, and how the space will be used. Review Safety Data Sheets for compatibility, ventilation, temperature control, and fire protection needs. Early coordination with your AHJ helps ensure compliance with fire, building, and environmental codes.
Learn more about planning a hazardous material storage building for the extraction industry.
Class I Division 1 refers to a hazardous location where flammable gases or vapors are present under normal operating conditions. These areas require specialized equipment, ignition control, and ventilation to reduce fire and explosion risks.
Class I Division 1 areas have flammable vapors present during normal operations and require stricter controls. Class I Division 2 areas only become hazardous under abnormal conditions, such as leaks or equipment failure. Both classifications must follow NFPA and electrical code requirements.
STUD-E is a complimentary on-site safety and compliance assessment for facilities handling flammable liquids and hazardous materials. It includes a facility walkthrough, hazard identification, code review, and a prioritized report aligned with NFPA and OSHA standards.
You receive a detailed report outlining identified hazards, risk priorities, relevant code references, and practical recommendations to improve flammable storage, spill containment, and overall safety compliance.
No. There is no purchase requirement. Assessments are scheduled to minimize disruption to operations, and findings are shared confidentially with your safety or facilities team.


