That is very good to know about the foundation requirements, I will look into that some more. I suppose the building department / inspector (seems like a one man operation here) will take issue with it, if my proposed 6" slab (4000 PSI w/ wire mesh), and 1' x 2' deep footers aren't satisfactory? I didn't notice any column base reactions on the preliminary drawings that Mueller sent me.
I would need an exposure category "c" where I live (due to open fields around me on all sides), which both building types cover.
i see this older thread was resurrected and figured i would chime in for anyone reading this later on. With respect to building codes, understand that the IRC is a simplified, perscriptive (rules based) version of the IBC made specifically for a contractor to build a building without engineering. In effect, to make the IRC, they take the parts of the IBC related to single family or multifamily less than three stories (so IBC use groups R5 plus parts of R2 and R3) and make a specific code. Then they reorganize the information into chapters that generally follow the order of construction (ch 3 planning, ch 4 foundations, ch 5 floors, ch 6 walls, etc.). Furthermore the percriptive rules allow you to eliminate engineering design. Follow the rules as written and you don't need engineering (might need architect though) but options are limited by the pre-engineered choices in the IRC. At any time, you can decide to ignore the percriptive rules based format of the IRC (chapters 4 and onward) and use IRC chapter 3 which allows you to design (with engineering) per the IBC. Read IRC section 301.1 and it lays this out. keep in mind the IBC is a performance based code meaning that it doesn't give you completed designs to choose from, just the limiting parameters and you can come up with any design you want that fits within those limiting parameters. IRC just gives you 1 or several options to choose that are known to work for use groups R5 and parts of R2 and R3. If your metal building met the IBC, it defiantely met any IRC requirement.
In my experience, I can't imagine a metal building meeting IBC 2012 and not automatically meeting IBC 2015 or 2018. Loads just don't change that much (if at all) from code to code.
On the reply I replied to, the poster brings up a good point to remember. Foundations aren't included in these things and likely need to be designed/permitted seperately from the metal building. Metal buildings are light and as your wind loads go up, the hold down requirements for your foundation also increase. I've seen light metal buildings with huge spread footings (far more than needed for downward gravity load bearing on soil) simply to provide a downward load to counteract wind uplift in the columns. I would personally not go crazy with the wind design for anything more than required by the windspeed in your zip code to make sure you don't end up spending all the money you saved on the metal building in the foundations as boat anchors. A very nice site for design loads based on your address is:
https://hazards.atcouncil.org/. it takes ASCE 7 (where loads are pulled from for IBC/IRC) and digitized the loading maps.