jike, good point on the minimum design concentrated load requirement. Per IBC 2003, Table 1607.1 there is a minimum concentrated live load of:
Hospitals: 1000 lb
Libraries: 1000 lb
Light Manufacturing: 2000 lb
Heavy Manufacturing: 3000 lb
Offices: 2000 lb
Schools: 1000 lb
Retail: 1000 lb
Section 1607.4 says to assume the concentration occurs over a uniformly distributed area of 2.5 feet by 2.5 feet. There is a footnote under Table 1607.1 dealing with point loads in parking garages (distributed area of 4.5 by 4.5 inches).
A common slab we use is: 3 feet on center steel joists, 3-4" concrete on 1" metal deck (non-composite). This can handle a point load of 2000 lb live load distributed over 2.5 by 2.5 feet.
As for a scissor lift, I wouldn't assume it has a distributed area of 2.5 feet by 2.5 feet under each wheel. Also, the point load from one end of a scissor lift can easily exceed 1000 lb. Instead, I'd assume:
-it has a wheel bearing area of 3" by 1" (punching shear)
-the distributed area supporting each wheel is half the distance between wheels, or 18" width strip of slab, whichever is less when checking moment and shear in the slab.
A good guess when designing the slab is that a scissor lift will weigh between 2000-4000 lb. This slab can also handle the factored point load of (1/4 * 4000) distributed over an area of 18".
I think my future plan will be to tell the contractor that it's a means and methods, and that he can hire us or another engineer to check whether he can use a scissor lift on our slab. However, I'll also be able to sleep at night when I dont' get any call on it, and I'm sure the contractor hasn't thought to check before he lifts the scissor lift up there, which is almost always.
Thanks for all the helpful responses.