The life safety code for a kitchen would typically depend upon the size and type of facility to which the kitchen is attached.
For example:
A school kitchen would be an "education occupancy".
A nightclub kitchen would be an "assembly occupancy".
A small commercial kitchen (under 50 seats) would be a "business occupancy".
A kitchen in a shopping mall might be a "mercantile occupancy" (selling goods) or "business" (selling services) or "assembly" (if it seats 50 or more people).
yes. yes it is.
Restaurant's require long pants as a part of their dress code. This is because there are so many ways you could be burned or cut on the job that the legs must be covered.
You'd have to ask your boss but many restaurants are fine with long shorts but the chef there may not personally approve.
Hell's Kitchen is a part of Manhattan/New York. Zip Code is 10036
Yes, SIC does stand for the Standard Industrial Classification Code which was first created by the U.S. government in 1937, but has since been replaced by the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).
The code given on army based equipment to determine its classification
no. 86 ..............
Polymorphic
payroll
90504
I assume you mean "Airline Code". If so, it is DL.
No