In the early days of the FP Act 1971, before smoke detection was widely used, the lobby approach to single staircase buildings was commonplace, including sleeping accommodation and hotels. I am talking the red hotels guide- which incidentally allowed 13metre dead end bedroom corridors, Boy we were pedantic in those days and ruined many a fine building!
As smoke detection became affordable, reliable and commonplace, where a building did not lend itself to lobby protection, it became common practice to to trade off the lobbies for smoke detection- in the early days L3 detection was regarded as covering stairs and corridors only. Nothing in rooms and self closers were not required on hotel bedroom doors, unless in a dead end. Enforcement Officers were happy to agree that the early detection was a fair trade off for the staircase protection
Then the interpretation of L3 was clarified and detection had to be provided in rooms off escape routes, and L2 became the prescribed standard for life risks. Hotels were required to have self closers fitted, the lilac guide replaced the red guide, and fire door seals appeared on the scene.
As L2 detection was now the norm, enforcement officers started to ask for the lobbies back on single staircase buildings-after all early detection was now a standard requirement for all buildings. Hey ho we go a full circle. The same officers who were happy to accept a single door protection with detection for many years now wanting lobby protection back. Why? Because the benefits of smoke detection were universally accepted, all sleeping accommodation required it so they were no longer able to trade off against it.
Thank goodness for the risk assessment approach.
And that there is still room for trade offs in some types of use- for example office and commercial buildings where smoke detection is not yet the automatic benchmark standard.
As for the new ADB and whether it should read 4.6.or 4.6a- mine says 4.6- I dont know. My version brings it into line with how I read and understand BS5588,i think your amendment takes it out of step. I would be interested to hear your interpretation of this saddlers.
And interesting as this technical discussion is we mustn't lose track of the real world and I wager theres more single stair office buildings without lobby proection than have it. And at the other extreme new buildings are going up that appear to throw all convention out of the window even to the extent of smoke curtains to protect firefighting lobbies, staircase widths, compartmentation, travel distances. They do this by the use of a whole range of proprietory software programs which they seem to select, mix and match to suit the desired outcome.
My boss used to slap me when I used a mixture of guidance on a job! Are they not doing the same, and as all these programs make assumptions and approximations there is a huge risk of compounding an error in my view.