This issue seemed to be in question on a few other posts so I thought I would weigh in on a recent experience. I currently have a CI project that is located atop a highrise building in Atlanta - we are one of hundreds of tenants. The building is certified Silver under the LEED EB v.2 rating system and has numerous other CI spaces in it. The entire building is non smoking and has the 25' policy, but no exterior signage exists because it was not required in v.2 of the EB rating system. When responding to the first round of review comments, we stated that we were attempting Case 1 Option 2 and explained that there were no operable windows or doors to the exterior and the air handling unit serving our floor drew in air from the roof, which was not susceptible to ETS. In addition, we provided a letter from the building managment confirming the no smoking policy. We recieved our review back with 65 points awarded but this prerequisite denied because we could not confirm that a signage system communicating the exterior smoking policy was in place.

Is it reasonable to expect a tenant to be accountable for a public space in a shared building that is outside of their scope and control? Either I am missing something (which is always a possibility) or this is one of the more egregious examples of lack of common sense on the part of the reviewer that I have seen.