and a lot of BCBs were happy to accept it.
Tail wagging the dog.
I wonder if the BCBs are fully considering much of what they approve or are they pandering to commercial pressure? I have lost much sleep this weekend pondering what to do about a 2 year old 10 storey mixed use city centre development where I was asked to carry out a FRA of the residential accommodation. Elements of structure should have been 120 mins reduced to 90 (fair enough its only 31m), doors on protected shafts reduced to 30 mins- these brutes extend from retail to top of roof though dead end flat corridors. Trouble is they are not protected shafts - the base of the shafts rise unprotected from the retail storage and refuse areas, the worst being a 250 sq m wheely bin storage area with no ceiling.
6 storey flats on top- 15 single staircase cores that have no door discharging to fresh air at the bottom, but to the lowest level of flat corridor in a dead end condition with up to a 9 m unprotected corridor past flats and laundry to the final exit/ access for firefighters. No provision for ventilation on the lowest level or on several upper levels either. Stay put strategy no detection or alarm in common areas or risers.
Top storey height 31 m but standard passenger lifts. I could go on at some length.
Design had an approved fire strategy written on several sides of A4 that did not mention any of the above.
Designed, built by a large National, approved by local authority BC and full consultation with fire authority. How on earth does this happen?
I have turned down two other projects recently. There seems to be a fashion for reducing the protection to firefighting shafts. There have been two proposals come across my desk in which firefighting access is being sacrificed for in favour of architectural aesthetics. In one multi storey hotel the firefighting lobby at one upper level was to be created using drop down curtains. In another access to the base of one of the fire fighting shafts was through the unprotected ground floor. This was to be approved on the basis that if the fire was on the ground floor access to the upper floors would not be required and that there was another shaft giving acess to the upper floors that could be used. The size of the building required two shafts.
When I turned the job down I was reminded that there are many other fire consultancies who will support and assist in pushing such schemes through.
Tail wagging the dog again? Because these buildings will be held up as icons of great design and may be used to further reduce standards when ADB is next reviewed?