The Ohio Building Plans Examiner (ICC - B3) Highlighted & Tabbed Book Package is designed for candidates preparing for the ICC Building Plans Examiner certification exam using the 2021 code references. This package includes the major building code, structural concrete, and concrete reference books needed for B3 exam preparation, prepared in a highlighted and tabbed format to support organized study, faster navigation, and more efficient open-book exam preparation.
Building plans examination requires the ability to review construction documents before work begins and determine whether the proposed design complies with applicable building code requirements. A plans examiner may review architectural plans, structural drawings, life safety plans, code summaries, foundation plans, framing plans, wall sections, roof details, accessibility details, special inspection statements, material specifications, and supporting calculations. The ICC B3 exam measures a candidate’s ability to locate code provisions, evaluate plan information, and apply the correct rule to plan-review-style scenarios.
This highlighted and tabbed book package gives Ohio candidates the key references needed to prepare for the 2021 ICC Building Plans Examiner exam. The International Building Code, 2021 is the primary reference for building plan review, including occupancy classification, construction type, building height and area, fire-resistance-rated construction, means of egress, accessibility-related provisions, structural requirements, foundations, materials, roof assemblies, wall construction, and public safety provisions. ACI 318-19: Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete and Commentary supports study of reinforced concrete design provisions, structural concrete requirements, materials, durability, strength, detailing, and construction requirements. The 2021 ICC Concrete Manual helps candidates connect concrete code requirements to construction practices, inspection coordination, concrete quality, reinforcement, formwork, placement, testing, and field-related concrete concepts.
The highlighted and tabbed format is especially useful for an open-book plans examiner exam. Candidates must move quickly through the references, identify the correct chapter or section, apply tables and exceptions, and determine whether a submitted design meets the requirement. Highlighting helps draw attention to important code language, while tabs help candidates locate major topics faster during study. This structure supports a more practical preparation process because candidates can work directly with organized references while building code navigation skills.
For Ohio candidates pursuing building plan review responsibilities, the ICC B3 exam may support a broader professional path involving building department work, municipal plan review, code enforcement, commercial construction review, design coordination, construction document evaluation, or building department personnel certification. ICC administers the Building Plans Examiner exam, while Ohio certification, employment authority, and building department requirements are handled through Ohio’s building standards framework. This product focuses on the highlighted and tabbed exam book package used for ICC B3 preparation.
The ICC Building Plans Examiner exam is code based. Many questions are written as practical plan review situations. A question may describe an occupancy classification, allowable building height, required construction type, fire wall, rated corridor, stairway, exit access condition, foundation detail, concrete structural element, roof assembly, exterior wall condition, accessibility feature, or special inspection item. The candidate must determine which code provision applies and select the answer that best matches the requirement. Because the exam is timed, organized books and repeated lookup practice can make a meaningful difference in preparation.
The ICC Building Plans Examiner (B3) exam is a certification exam for candidates who review building construction documents for code compliance. The exam measures the ability to evaluate submitted plans, identify applicable code requirements, review building design information, and determine whether construction documents demonstrate compliance with the International Building Code.
The exam commonly includes 80 multiple-choice questions with a 3.5-hour time limit. It is an open-book exam. Candidates preparing for the 2021 exam version should study from the International Building Code, 2021 and the supporting concrete references included in this package. Because the exam is timed, candidates need both plan review judgment and code navigation skill.
Major study areas include general administration, building planning, footings and foundations, floor construction, wall construction and coverings, roof and ceiling construction, public safety, and special construction. Candidates should be prepared to answer questions that require table usage, plan review interpretation, construction document evaluation, and careful reading of code language.
General administration questions may involve permit requirements, construction documents, inspections, special inspections, structural observations, alternative materials and methods, approvals, public information, code compliance procedures, and responsibilities related to plan review. Plans examiner candidates should understand how the code establishes the review framework and how incomplete or unclear construction documents may affect approval.
Building planning questions may involve occupancy classification, mixed occupancies, allowable building height, allowable building area, construction type, fire separation, incidental uses, special occupancy requirements, fire protection systems, egress design, accessibility, interior finishes, and code summary information. These topics are important because many building requirements depend on occupancy group, construction type, building size, and fire protection features.
Footings and foundations questions may involve soil conditions, foundation design information, concrete footings, foundation walls, slab construction, pier and pile provisions, drainage, reinforcement, load path, and construction document requirements. Candidates should understand how foundation information is shown on structural drawings and how the IBC connects foundation requirements to referenced standards.
Floor construction questions may involve structural floor systems, fire-resistance-rated floor assemblies, openings, penetrations, materials, live loads, framing plans, concrete floor systems, special inspections, and construction details. Plans examiner candidates should know how to find requirements for floor design and how to identify code issues in a plan review scenario.
Wall construction and covering questions may involve exterior walls, fire walls, fire barriers, fire partitions, smoke barriers, shaft enclosures, wall coverings, masonry, concrete, steel, wood, fire-resistance ratings, opening protectives, joints, penetrations, weather protection, and wall assembly documentation. These topics often require careful review of both code provisions and plan details.
Roof and ceiling construction questions may involve roof assemblies, roof coverings, roof drainage coordination, structural roof framing, fire classification, attic and concealed spaces, ceiling assemblies, roof access, insulation details, and load-related requirements. Candidates should be prepared to evaluate roof and ceiling information shown on plans and specifications.
Public safety and special construction questions may involve safeguards during construction, encroachments, special inspections, structural observation, accessibility features, means of egress, emergency systems, atriums, stages, special uses, glass and glazing, elevators, and other code provisions that affect building safety. These questions often require the candidate to connect a plan detail with the correct code section.
The ICC Building Plans Examiner (B3) exam is an open-book exam. Open book testing allows candidates to use approved references during the exam, but it still requires strong preparation. Candidates must know where major subjects are located, how the books are organized, and how to apply the correct code provision under timed conditions.
For the 2021 exam version, candidates should prepare with the International Building Code, 2021 and the concrete references included in this package. The highlighted and tabbed format supports open-book preparation by making major subjects easier to locate during study and review. Candidates should still practice using the books regularly so the organization becomes familiar before exam day.
A strong open-book strategy begins with the table of contents and index in each reference. Candidates should know where to find administration, occupancy classification, construction type, height and area, fire-resistance-rated construction, means of egress, accessibility, structural design, soils and foundations, concrete, masonry, steel, wood, exterior walls, roof assemblies, special inspections, and safeguards during construction.
Highlighting and tabs can help organize preparation around important code areas. Tabs may help identify major chapters and topics, while highlighting may draw attention to key requirements, tables, definitions, exceptions, and plan review provisions. Candidates should use the highlighted and tabbed references actively during practice so the organization becomes familiar before exam day.
Open-book success depends on speed and accuracy. During the exam, candidates must read the question, identify the subject, locate the controlling code section, apply the requirement, and choose the best answer. Slow page-by-page searching can waste valuable time. A better approach is to practice moving from keywords in the question to the correct tab, chapter, section, table, or index entry before exam day.
Candidates preparing for the ICC Building Plans Examiner (B3) exam typically begin by confirming the correct exam and code year through ICC, obtaining the required references, reviewing the exam content outline, and creating a study schedule. The exam is purchased and scheduled through ICC using the candidate’s myICC account.
After selecting the B3 exam, candidates follow ICC scheduling and testing procedures. Testing may be available through approved computer-based testing options or remote proctored testing when offered for the exam. Candidates should review ICC policies for identification, approved references, book preparation, calculators, scheduling, retesting, and exam-day conduct before the test date.
For Ohio candidates, passing the ICC B3 exam may support a larger professional goal involving building plan review, building department employment, municipal code enforcement, commercial plan review, design review, or building department personnel certification. The ICC exam is an exam credential, while Ohio certification, employment authority, and building department recognition are handled through the applicable Ohio process.
A practical preparation path includes obtaining the highlighted and tabbed books in this package, reviewing the ICC B3 content areas, learning the structure of each reference, studying one subject at a time, practicing timed code lookup, and completing plan-review-style practice questions. Candidates should keep records of passing exam results for employer, building department, or state certification use as applicable.
Passing the ICC B3 exam does not replace any separate Ohio application, experience requirement, employer requirement, building department appointment, or state certification process. Candidates should pair exam preparation with the Ohio building standards pathway that applies to their intended role.
Ohio building plan review work is connected to Ohio’s building code and building department certification structure. Candidates pursuing building plans examiner responsibilities in Ohio should understand the difference between an ICC certification exam and Ohio’s state-level requirements for building department personnel.
The ICC Building Plans Examiner (B3) exam supports building plan review knowledge. Ohio certification, employment authority, and building department recognition are handled separately through the applicable Ohio process. Depending on the position and certification path, a candidate may need to meet state, employer, or department requirements in addition to passing an ICC exam.
This highlighted and tabbed book package supports the exam preparation portion by providing the listed 2021 references in an organized study format. It does not replace an Ohio application, work experience requirement, employer requirement, building department appointment, or state certification process. Candidates working toward an Ohio credential should pair exam study with the applicable Ohio certification steps for their role.
For candidates working in architecture, engineering, construction management, inspection, code enforcement, design review, commercial construction, municipal plan review, or building department operations, the ICC B3 exam can help document knowledge of building plan review. The same subject areas tested on the exam also appear in practical plan review work, including occupancy, construction type, height and area, fire ratings, egress, accessibility, foundations, concrete, wall systems, roof assemblies, and special inspections.
The ICC B3 exam should be studied as a plan review exam. Candidates should practice evaluating the types of information that appear on submitted construction documents, including code summaries, occupancy classifications, construction type statements, height and area calculations, life safety plans, fire-rated assembly details, foundation plans, structural notes, concrete details, wall sections, roof framing plans, accessibility details, and special inspection statements.
Start with the International Building Code, 2021. Review the table of contents and learn the overall chapter structure. The IBC is a large reference, and candidates who know the chapter layout have a major advantage during timed testing. Spend time locating chapters for administration, occupancy classification, special detailed requirements, construction types, fire-resistance-rated construction, interior finishes, fire protection systems, means of egress, accessibility, structural design, soils and foundations, concrete, masonry, steel, wood, glass, exterior walls, roof assemblies, and special inspections.
Building planning preparation should include occupancy groups, mixed occupancies, allowable height and area, construction classifications, fire separation, incidental uses, fire protection systems, and special occupancy requirements. These subjects often connect to other code requirements, so candidates should understand how classification decisions affect plan review outcomes.
Fire and life safety preparation should include rated walls, fire barriers, fire partitions, smoke barriers, horizontal assemblies, shaft enclosures, opening protectives, penetrations, joints, fireblocking, draftstopping, interior finishes, and egress systems. Plans examiners must be able to determine whether drawings show the required fire and life safety features clearly enough for approval.
Means of egress preparation should include occupant load, exit access, exits, exit discharge, number of exits, travel distance, common path of egress travel, dead ends, corridors, doors, stairways, ramps, guards, handrails, and accessible means of egress. Candidates should practice reading egress questions carefully and using the applicable tables accurately.
Structural and foundation preparation should include soils, footings, foundations, concrete, masonry, steel, wood, structural design criteria, load path, special inspections, and structural observations. The concrete references in this package help candidates study concrete details, reinforcement, concrete quality, construction requirements, and plan review considerations related to structural concrete.
Wall, floor, roof, and ceiling preparation should include assembly ratings, structural framing, material limitations, coverings, roof classification, roof construction, ceiling systems, exterior wall requirements, weather protection, fire-resistance-rated construction, opening protection, and special conditions shown on construction documents. Candidates should practice connecting drawing details to the correct IBC chapter or referenced standard.
Concrete preparation should include formwork, reinforcing steel, concrete cover, concrete placement, curing, testing, construction joints, strength, durability, special inspection coordination, and field practices. ACI 318-19 supports the structural concrete requirements behind the design, while the 2021 ICC Concrete Manual helps candidates understand how concrete provisions connect to construction quality and review considerations.
Accessibility preparation should include accessible routes, accessible entrances, parking, doors, ramps, elevators, toilet rooms, signage, seating, dwelling and sleeping units where applicable, and required accessible features in commercial buildings. Candidates should understand how accessibility requirements appear in the IBC and how accessibility details should be shown on construction documents.
The highlighted and tabbed format supports active study. Candidates should use the tabs to move to major topics, then read the highlighted sections carefully and connect them to practice questions. Highlighting can help draw attention to important code language, but candidates should still read the complete section and any exceptions that apply. Many exam questions turn on exact wording, defined terms, tables, or listed exceptions.
Timed code lookup practice is essential. Begin by working slowly and focusing on accuracy. Read the question, identify the subject, locate the tab or chapter, review the applicable section or table, and answer directly from the code. After the book structure becomes familiar, begin timing practice sessions. The goal is to find answers efficiently while still reading the question and code language carefully.
A strong weekly study routine might include one session on administration and permits, one on occupancy and building planning, one on construction type and fire ratings, one on means of egress, one on accessibility and public safety, one on foundations and concrete, and one on walls, floors, roofs, and mixed review. Mixed review is important because the actual exam does not separate questions into long study blocks.
1 Exam Prep helps students prepare for licensing and certification exams with organized study guidance, trade-focused review, practice-oriented preparation, reference navigation, and confidence-building study structure. For the Ohio Building Plans Examiner (ICC - B3) exam, preparation should focus on code navigation, construction document review, commercial building concepts, structural awareness, fire and life safety provisions, accessibility, concrete plan review, and the ability to apply IBC requirements to plan review scenarios.
Many candidates preparing for the B3 exam already have experience in construction, architecture, engineering, plan review, inspection, code enforcement, construction management, or building department work. That experience is valuable, but the exam requires answers based on the code. 1 Exam Prep helps students focus on the reference books, the exam topics, and the lookup habits needed for an open-book certification exam.
Using the correct books is the foundation. The highlighted and tabbed format adds structure by helping candidates move more efficiently through the International Building Code, ACI 318-19, and the 2021 ICC Concrete Manual. Students should learn how each reference is organized, where high-use sections are located, how definitions affect code interpretation, and how tables and exceptions influence the correct answer.
1 Exam Prep encourages active study rather than passive reading. That means practicing code lookup, working through plan-review-style questions, learning common tables, reviewing definitions, and developing a strategy for applying the code under timed conditions. This kind of preparation helps candidates build the skills needed for the exam and for practical building plan review work.
For Ohio candidates, this preparation can support a broader professional goal involving building department responsibilities, municipal plan review, commercial construction review, code enforcement, or construction compliance. No book package or study method can guarantee a passing score, certification approval, or employment outcome, but working from the correct references and practicing code navigation gives candidates a stronger foundation for exam day.
This package includes ACI 318-19: Building Code Requirements for Structural Concrete and Commentary, the International Building Code, 2021, and the 2021 ICC Concrete Manual. The books are prepared as a highlighted and tabbed exam book package.
Highlighted and tabbed means the books are prepared to support easier study and faster navigation. Highlighting helps draw attention to important code areas, while tabs help candidates locate major sections more efficiently during preparation.
Yes. The ICC Building Plans Examiner (B3) exam is an open-book exam. Candidates should prepare by learning how to quickly locate and apply provisions in the approved references during timed testing.
Yes. This product is written for Ohio candidates preparing for the ICC Building Plans Examiner (B3) exam. Ohio certification, employment, and building department requirements are separate from the ICC exam and should be handled through the applicable Ohio building standards process.
The exam covers building plan review topics such as general administration, building planning, footings and foundations, floor construction, wall construction and coverings, roof and ceiling construction, public safety, special construction, structural provisions, concrete, and special inspections.
The ICC Building Plans Examiner (B3) exam commonly includes 80 multiple-choice questions with a 3.5-hour time limit.
ACI 318-19 supports study of structural concrete requirements used in building design and plan review. It helps candidates prepare for reinforced concrete provisions, construction requirements, materials, durability, strength, and related concrete code concepts.
The 2021 ICC Concrete Manual supports concrete quality and field practices. It helps candidates connect the 2021 IBC and ACI 318-19 to concrete placement, reinforcement, testing, quality control, inspection coordination, and construction practices.
This product title identifies a highlighted and tabbed exam book package and includes the listed books. It does not state that an online course is included.
Study directly from the highlighted and tabbed books in this package. Learn the IBC chapter structure, review definitions, practice using tables, study important exceptions, and complete timed code lookup practice focused on building plan review scenarios.
Passing the ICC B3 exam supports the ICC certification portion of building plans examiner preparation. Ohio building department certification, employment authority, and state requirements are handled separately through Ohio’s applicable building standards process.
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