My question is will LUL appeal against the Notice for every sub surface station, that could cost the LFB lots of money. Proving that a premises has a serious risk when that term is not defined antwhere could be difficult. .
With the LU system, virtually every item on our FS shopping list is non applicable, in the sense that the features of the underground system are unique: Travel distances measured in miles. Compartments measured in scores of miles. Occupancies in tens of thousands.
Until the late 1980s LU's management of FS was appalling. Limited AFD and FFE. Poor training and responsibilities. Poor maintenance and hardly any proper procedures.
I attended a fire involving a wooden sleeper in a tunnel which, despite sparks being drawn into the the tunnel every time a train passed overhead, LU wanted to allow it to burn all day so that engineers would have less timber to remove overnight. (Yes a controlled{?} burning in an occupied public transit tunnel!). I later attended the Oxford Circus 20PF (just prior to Kings X) which was caused by smokers material discarded into uncontrolled builders storage on the platform, in which we nearly lost a number of FFs and LU staff.
Since Kings X, LU management have evolved - indeed were forced to evolve- and have introduced £millions of pounds of changes. The most significant is their management regimes.
I understand that it is the management structures/systems which are likely to be involved in any Alteration notices, rather than the actual infrastructure, as it's the quality of that management that is key to maintaining the systems within this difficult environment.