Can anyone assist with this one regarding purpose built flats please.
The leasehold owner of the individual property is responsible under the terms of the lease, for all electrics, water, plaster, decorations and fittings within the property. In other words, if the property has a problem with its water sewerage or electrics, it is the responsibility of the owner of that leasehold flat to repair and maintain it.
Following a fire risk assessment the management company are to install within each person’s individual properties automatic (5839 part 6) detection (which were not there before), and along with other matters for both the flats and the common areas including upgrading of structural measures to bring the premises up to date. Also stay put evacuation etc.
My question then is: who maintains the smoke/heat detection in the flats once it has been installed? is it the case that the owner of the flat maintains the equipment as they maintain the other electrical equipment and wiring within their property.
Or, does the Management Company, as the installer, need to maintain it?, and what would that maintenance entail? Would it entail having to test the equipment to ensure that it is working, and if so what happens when access is not given for that purpose? The ‘fire Safety in purpose-built blocks of flats’ guide: Appendix 13 (Three storey block with uncooperative leaseholders) gives a good example of the sort of thing management companies have to contend with but doesn’t quite answer my question.
If the managment company and not the leaseholder are respesible then the provision of a remote test switch, with the test switch for each flat being in the common areas for ease of access seems to be the only other solution I can think of, I’m not familiar with how they work or show that the detector is working, do they all need testing weekly? Or can they be tested in rotation in the same way call points are in commercial premises. Any help or advice out there in firenetland would be welcome!