Get your study setup aligned for the Colorado Denver Demolition Class B Contractor (ICC 492_CO_D) exam with a focused Exam Book Package built around the exact references you listed. Demolition work is high-responsibility work. It sits at the intersection of building code compliance, jobsite safety, documentation discipline, and field decision-making. When you prepare with the correct code and OSHA standards, you build more than test readiness—you build the habits that help you operate confidently on real projects.
This package is designed for candidates who want a clean, exam-aligned reference set without extra distractions. Your preparation will center on interpreting building requirements and administrative policies, understanding what demolition work must meet from a code perspective, and strengthening safety knowledge that supports compliant work practices. Many candidates studying for demolition contractor testing find that the challenge is not “reading the book,” but learning how to recognize what a question is really testing, finding the controlling section efficiently, and applying it to a scenario without second-guessing.
Because you confirmed this exam is open book, your biggest advantage comes from performance: fast navigation, accurate confirmation, and steady pacing. Open book doesn’t mean the exam is easy—it means your ability to use your references effectively becomes part of the test. The right strategy is to train the same way you’ll perform: identify the topic, choose the correct book, confirm the key requirement or safety rule, and move on with confidence.
Whether you’re stepping into demolition contracting for the first time or you’re formalizing your qualifications for Denver work, this book package keeps your study anchored to the exact references you provided—so your practice time is focused, efficient, and realistic.
This Exam Book Package is intended to support preparation for the Colorado Denver Demolition Class B Contractor (ICC 492_CO_D) exam using the references listed on this page. Official exam specifications—such as the number of questions, time limit, passing score, exam delivery method, or a detailed topic outline—were not provided with your request, so they are not included in this section.
What this package supports directly is the practical side of exam readiness in an open-book environment:
This exam is an open book test. Open book becomes a true advantage only when you prepare for open-book performance. A timed exam does not reward slow searching or flipping through multiple books hoping something looks familiar. It rewards candidates who can recognize what the question is testing, choose the correct reference quickly, confirm the controlling language precisely, and move on with steady pace.
The open-book routine that works for multi-reference contractor exams:
How to make open book work for you: Your goal isn’t to look up everything from scratch. Your goal is to understand enough to narrow down the answer first, then use the reference to confirm the key detail. With practice, your lookups become faster and your confidence becomes more consistent.
Licensing and qualification pathways for demolition contracting can vary by jurisdiction and local administrative requirements. Since official steps for the Denver Demolition Class B credential were not provided with your request, the outline below focuses on a practical exam-prep workflow that helps most candidates move from study to test readiness with a clear plan.
This workflow mirrors real contractor thinking: identify the issue, confirm the controlling requirement, and make the compliant decision without guessing.
Specific Denver or Colorado requirements for eligibility, applications, fees, renewals, or continuing education were not provided with your request, so they are not included in this section. This product page focuses on the exam preparation reference set you listed and the practical open-book study approach that helps candidates use these references effectively.
In demolition contracting, success often depends on consistent compliance behavior: understanding how code requirements apply, following administrative expectations, and maintaining a safety-first mindset. These references support that foundation while you prepare for the exam.
The most effective way to prepare for an open-book, multi-reference contractor exam is performance-based practice. Reading helps, but real readiness comes from repeating the actions you’ll use during the test: identify the topic, choose the correct reference, locate the controlling section, confirm the exact language, and move forward with steady pacing.
1) Train the “which book controls this?” decision first
With four references, the first skill is knowing where to look. A practical way to organize your study approach is:
Strong first choices reduce wasted time bouncing between books and help you stay confident under the timer.
2) Build navigation familiarity instead of trying to memorize everything
Open-book exams reward navigation skill. Spend early study sessions learning how each reference is organized so your lookups become intentional instead of random. When you know where to look first, you confirm faster, second-guess less, and keep pace more consistently.
3) Practice confirm-and-move
A common open-book mistake is treating every question like a research project. Strong candidates narrow down the likely answer, confirm the key wording, then move on. This protects your time and keeps momentum strong across the full exam.
4) Train qualifier and exception awareness
Many code and safety questions hinge on the language that changes the rule: “where required,” “exception,” “when,” “if,” or similar qualifiers. Build the habit of scanning for those words during confirmations. This improves accuracy without slowing you down.
5) Use scenario practice to build contractor judgment
Demolition work decisions are rarely isolated facts. Practice with scenario-style questions where you identify the issue, locate the controlling rule, and apply it correctly to the described condition. The goal is to build a consistent decision-making process—one that supports both exam performance and real jobsite compliance behavior.
6) Review missed questions by learning location
When you miss a practice question, don’t stop at the correct answer. Find the supporting section in the correct reference and learn where it lives. Over time, this builds “memory of location,” a major open-book advantage that improves both speed and confidence.
A practical weekly study rhythm for multi-reference open-book exams:
This rhythm keeps you consistent, builds calmer speed, and helps you perform like a contractor who confirms requirements efficiently rather than guessing.
1 Exam Prep supports your Colorado Denver Demolition Class B Contractor (ICC 492_CO_D) goal with organized study guidance and practice-oriented preparation designed for open-book, multi-reference testing. Instead of studying randomly, you build a repeatable system: recognize what the question is testing, choose the correct reference quickly, confirm requirements accurately (including exceptions and qualifying conditions), and maintain steady pace under pressure.
Our approach is designed to support realistic preparation habits that match the way contractors work: identify the compliance issue, confirm the controlling requirement, and make a clear decision with confidence—without guaranteeing exam outcomes or licensing results.
This package includes the International Building Code (2015), Denver Building Code Amendments and Policies (2016 amendments to the 2015 IBC administration), OSHA 29 CFR 1910, and OSHA 29 CFR 1926 & 1904.
Yes. You confirmed the exam is an open book test.
Train the “which reference controls this?” decision first, then practice fast navigation and precise confirmation. Timed practice sets help build pacing, and reviewing missed questions by learning the exact location improves speed over time.
This product is an Exam Book Package. Course access is included only when a product title or listing explicitly states that a course is included.
No. Official exam specifications and any exam-related fees were not provided with this request, so they are not included here.