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Control Room HabitabilityOn this page: RequirementsThe required aspects of a control room for nuclear power reactors are established by General Design Criterion (GDC-19), "Control Room," of Appendix A, "General Design Criteria for Nuclear Power Plants," to 10 CFR Part 50. History of ConcernsSince around 1980, the NRC staff and industry have been working on concerns with control room habitability. Control room habitability is the required capability of the control room to be safe for humans to remain there and work during both normal operations and accident conditions. This capability includes protection from the effects of radiation, hazardous chemicals, fire and smoke, as well as having breathable air, heating and cooling, and other facilities for human comfort. In its review of license amendment submittals over the past several years, the staff has identified numerous problems associated with the assessment of control room habitability. These problems have included the overall soundness of the control room envelope (the plant area that includes the main control room and other rooms and areas to which the operators must go to control the plant during an accident) and the manner in which licensees have demonstrated the ability of their control room designs to meet GDC-19. For explanatory information, see the Glossary and List of Guidance. Resolution GuidanceSince 1998, the staff has been working with industry through the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) and the Nuclear Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning Users Group to develop guidance to address control room habitability. Also, during this time, industry and NEI have developed an industry guidance
document NEI 99-03
The staff also developed a proposed generic letter on control room habitability, which was available to the public for comment from May through September 2002. The final version of the generic letter, GL 2003-01, "Control Room Habitability," was issued on June 12, 2003. This generic letter requests that licensees provide confirmation that their facility's control room meets the applicable regulatory requirements and that control room habitability systems are designed, constructed, configured, operated, and maintained according to the facility's design and licensing bases. The NRC worked with the Industry through NEI and the Technical Specification Task Force (TSTF) worked to develop Technical Specification Task Force Traveler TSTF-448, Revision 3, “Control Room Habitability.” TSTF-448, Revision 3, was approved and issued as a Consolidated Line Item Improvement Process (CLIIP). The model safety evaluation for TSTF-448 was published in the Federal Register (72 Fed. Reg. 2022) January 17, 2007. See List of Guidance and Guidance Development. TestingSince 1992, the majority of licensees for the U.S. commercial power reactor control rooms have tested their control rooms to determine how much unfiltered air is leaking in. This air may be contaminated with radioactive materials or toxic gases. These licensees used methods from industrial standard ASTM E741, "Standard Test Methods for Determining Air Change in a Single Zone by Means of a Tracer Gas Dilution." List of GuidanceThe following links on this page are to documents in Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF). See our Plugins, Viewers, and Other Tools page for more information. For successful viewing of PDF documents on our site please be sure to use the latest version of Adobe.
Public MeetingsThe following is a list, in chronological order, of the slides and summaries documenting the public meetings held concerning the Proposed Generic Letter and Draft Guidance on Control Room Habitability. The following links on this page are to documents in Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF). See our Plugins, Viewers, and Other Tools page for more information. For successful viewing of PDF documents on our site please be sure to use the latest version of Adobe.
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