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AnthonyB

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Posts posted by AnthonyB

  1. If they are shunt ducts they are designed to reduce fire and smoke spread - if not and are directly ducted it's not considered practicable to retrofit new ducting or dampers but for bathrooms a more simpler intumescent grille is considered adequate, this would be more so in a hotel that simultaneously evacuates unlike flats.

     

    This shows a shunt ductwork arrangement to reduce fire and smoke spread between flats

  2. There is an anomaly in the fire door guidance in Building Regs Guidance (which whilst not directly applicable to legacy buildings is often used as a benchmark in lieu of any other specific guidance) where a door protecting an escape route should be FD30S but a door protecting a riser/plant room/electrical intake need only be FD30 and often causes arguments where the riser/plant/intake also opens directly onto an escape route - some will say the higher standard of FD30s should apply to protect the escape, others will fall back on the fact these rooms are specifically detailed as only needing FD30.

    If you are renewing anyhow the cost of using a combined intumescent fire & smoke seal compared to intumescent only is negligible enough to go down that route for the added protection.

    It would be a few months before I'm anywhere near that part of London & whilst I could do a specific trip down it would be at a premium due to absorbing the overheads in one fee rather than the usual planned road trip of multiple jobs.

  3. If you are under 300 sq.m. then a single zone for the whole building or over more than one storey is compliant, the only exception would be a HMO or Sheltered Housing where zoning per room/dwelling is recommended regardless of the size. A non Building Regs flat conversion can be classed as a HMO under s257 of the Housing Act if at least two thirds rental, but this is mainly an administrative definition to allow these premises to require licensing should a council wish to as part of an additional licensing scheme and not for specific fire precautions reasons. It can be beneficial to zone further but isn't needed to meet BS5839 recommendations so unless an addressable system (which can easily and cheaply be rezoned by programming) I wouldn't bother as you would need recabling.

    The reason for heat detection on flat hallways is to prevent the whole building being disrupted by false alarms that could be generated by smoke detection as the common system is to protect people in the rest of the building, not the flat of fire origin. In this case each flat would still need local smoke alarms to protect the flat residents - a false alarm in these would only disrupt the flat causing it. It's possible for a common system to do double duty by having a smoke instead of a heat and no separate local smoke alarms - if there are no false alarm issues then this is fine.  

  4. What exactly is wrong with the existing installation - nothing substantial has changed to require retrospective application of standards - also, are the consumer units still plastic or are they now in their own 'non combustible housing' i.e. metal as per modern wiring standards? If the latter it reduces the reliance on the cupboard and in some cases my clients have found it easier and cheaper to change the electrics than the cupboard.

  5. On 12/06/2025 at 13:33, Beth Morrison said:

    Hi Everyone,

    Reading through the various different legislation, and have become stumped. We have student housing - over 11 metres in height, whereby a Flat Door then has a cluster of 4 separate bedrooms inside.

    Currently, each individual bedroom door is being checked annually by a Fire Door professional in addition to the Flat Entrance Door and Communal doors. 

    My query is - do the internal bedroom doors really need a professional annual check or can these just form part of the checks maintenance staff? The cost is becoming quite significant 

    Thanks in advance,

    A suitable system of maintenance is required by the legislation, your FRA should determine the frequency. The Government never intended the cash cow of every inspection being a full in depth check - this is detailed in the guidance to the Fire Safety (England) Regulations. Usually where the doorset has been established by specialist inspection to be fully compliant the wear & tear checks can follow the style of the FS(E)Checklist and can be done in house although some basic training is recommended. Professional checks would still be of use if there have been any alterations or changes, any issues found on the in house checks where 'seek professional advice' is the result and every few years as a backstop

  6. Fire doors are seen as a cash cow and many smaller blocks are suffering from unnecessary burdens to the lease/common holders due to incorrect advice on doors that does not follow Government guidance. In many of these blocks the original fire doors remain suitable as long as in good order and the only critical issues are related to doors not self closing properly/at all or doors replaced by non fire rated doors.

  7. On 11/06/2025 at 13:26, Guest Michael Sealey said:

    Hi , 

    I'm after some advice - with completing a fire risk assessment for a medium sized high street retail unit , with private residents above ( not our demise.)

    We have one main entrance/ exit door & one fire exit to the rear. I've been advised to discount the main entrance / exit for travel distance calculations - meaning we now technically have one fire exit , and thus single direction . Is this correct , or do we calculate travel distances with all doors included ?

    Thanks 

    Sounds like you may need to use a professional risk assessor if you aren't sure - but in essence travel distances and exit capacities are different issues. If you have two or more exits (that meet the 45 degree rule or are separated by fire resisting construction) you can use the Travel distances listed for more than one direction of escape (but be aware that initial dead ends where you can only go one way must meet the single distance up to the point that routes diverge).
    Then you need to ensure the number and width of exits is enough for the occupancy - you always discount the widest exit for this just in case the fire blocks access.

    The extract in the above reply is fro Approved Document B, a design guide under the Building Regulations for new premises - existing ones should use this - https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/fire-safety-risk-assessment-offices-and-shops

    Useful extracts:

    image.png.2c1867f8e58049265b50e87c3ea2cfce.pngimage.png.49fa44a366570198ecc624e8f0a8518d.png

    image.png.5acb42ee33df654b154ca108a11400ea.png

    image.thumb.png.567b439a09488f295bed63ffd44f6b0a.png

  8. 13 hours ago, Guest Mr Chris said:

    Thank you Anthony for that valuable information and referral to the guide. I would presume that fire doors are definitely required for the 2 gf flats despite their not opening direct to the stairs? They open to the gf lobby area with the stairs off that. Many thanks, again. The four flat owners are the freeholders and we manage the block ourselves

    Possibly, but without seeing it for myself I can't be definitive.

  9. You (well the block freeholder or commoners) are legally required to have a fire risk assessment which will address this. Fire doors will be required to the front doors of flats opening into the single internal shared stair, however if these are the original flat fire doors and ironmongery and in good working order they will not need replacement  - usually the main fault with these is no self closer or one that doesn't work fully (usually as it's a single chain closer) and this can be replaced with a modern EN1154 closer to overcome this.
    If a door has been changed from the original fire door and is no longer a fire door then this would need replacement. 

    Internal doors within flats are not covered by the legislation affecting the block.

    For your block only one guide applies & that is here- https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/making-your-small-block-of-flats-safe-from-fire

  10. Firstly it's up to 4mm usually and there has been no change in building regulations affecting flat front doors and in any case the Building Regulations do not retrospectively apply to existing buildings unless being altered.

    Official guidance for front doors in flats allows varying standards of door dependant on the size and layout of the block - there is a fair chance no doors need replacing.

  11. Discounting the widest if there is any slight chance you are going to have over 60 persons going through a doorway it needs to open outwards. Panicking public, especially if intoxicated will head en masse to the exit they came in and history is littered with the bodies of the hundreds who have crushed up and died against inward opening doors

  12. If it's not boarded then the shop fire alarm will need detection throughout and sounders into the flat. The flat's system wouldn't normally need a smoke alarm at the foot of the stairs, but would require one to the stair head & internal hallway plus ideally one to the principal habitable room and a heat alarm to the kitchen

  13. As above, it's very ill informed & wrong to say they are illegal. HV fires from a H&S point of view are not safe for first aid attack with any type of extinguisher unless  electrically dead in any case. Of note should be the fact that live 11kV transformers are sometimes protected by water mist/emulsifying sprinkler heads!

    A Powder P50 is an option, they were never banned for indoor use & in the latest revision of BS5306-8 any mention against not using powder indoors has been removed.

  14. On 23/05/2025 at 16:28, Guest James said:

    They are only guides though.. right? 
    not enforceable 

    They can be - these guides are published under Article 50 of the Fire Safety Order where not following them tends to prove the law was breached in any enforcement action or prosecution,  so unless you have robust justification as to why you haven't followed them and how your alternative measures still provide equal safety then you are in trouble - ignoring them just because they are a guide won't cut it

  15. Guidance would be used as the benchmark as to what would meet the functional standards of the law. If you don't follow it you must be able to demonstrate why your alternative regime still affords an equal level of safety in relation to the risk and it must be more than 'it's too much trouble', ;we don't have the time' or 'it costs too much'.

    Remember that whilst 'guidance' that "where in any proceedings it is alleged that a person has contravened a provision of articles 8 to 22B or of regulations made under article 24:

    (a)proof of a failure to comply with any applicable guidance may be relied on as tending to establish that there was such a contravention"

    Deviation is possible (Sainsbury's justifying weekly fire alarm test for example) but requires a lot of work to establish why it's justifiable.

  16. Your fire risk assessment, a legal requirement in ALL premises should address this. It all depends on the fire separation between the chip shop & apartment - if it can be proven to be 60 minutes fire resistance then you won't need the building wide fire alarm system, just the Part 6 Grade D smoke/heat alarms to the flat and (if required, it may not need it in this case)a separate Part 1 system just to the Chip Shop

  17. I have four questions:

    1. Has anyone seen, or recommended, FD30S doors to be installed to rooms within flats? No, the requirement where a flat was built to Building Regulations has never been FD30s, originally it was fire check doors, then FD20 doors and currently FD30 doors. 

    2. Is an upgrade to FD30S the correct recommendation for all flat entrance doors, converted and purpose-built, regardless of where the government guidance says it is not necessary? It's not necessary or proportionate, the guidance was written to balance adequate safety with not burdening home owners with excessive costs (from £800-£3000)

    3. I have also read fire risk assessments, and seen fire safety advice on company websites, that suggest an 8mm or 10mm gap at the bottom of an upgraded FD30S door, but I read this as <4mm without a threshold seal or <3mm with a drop seal.  Which is the correct line? One for our resident fire door expert Neil, but if it's upgraded to achieve a notional FD30S I would expect that to include the threshold gap using a drop down seal or hardwood lipping

    4. I know advice can change with risk assessment, but Is there a definitive guide on fire doors in converted flats?  Or a summary that pulls together all of the guidance for converted flats and purpose built flats? A replacement for the LACORS guide is under preparation (& has been since about 2019, but was in hiatus for several years) and is by the authors of the Purpose Built Flats guide so will be in the same vein and use the same principles and thus not be as conflicting

    This has been discussed before and I have read almost all of the previous posts without forming a clear idea of what would satisfy any enforcing authority. The guides have status under Article 50 of the Fire Safety Order such that following them would see a premises 'deem to satisfy' the requirements of the legislation as long as correctly applied for a particular scenario

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