So far as I understand it the courts would tend to use that level of risk that would be achieved using good practice & modern standards as the benchmark - hence we generally aim to comply with that, unless we can demonstrate that they are inapplicable or inappropriate to apply to the particular situation in question, or we adopt an alternative approach that achieves the same level of fire risk by other means.
Exactly Fishy, but the whole point is that the premises
DOES comply with the standards and good practice prescribed in the current Approved Document in support of Building Regulations 2010.
My understanding is that the fire authority never suggested that an offence may have been committed under Article 32 (1) (a), merely that cold smoke seals were
required under the Fire Safety Order despite not being required under Building Regulations 2010; however, the original post did fail to mention that the doors concerned were ill fitting.
My reference to unacceptable risk is from the "Decision tree for action plan when existing premises
DO NOT comply with current standards" (PAS 79:2012, p.23): "do departures from current standards create unacceptable risk?" and; along with the reference to the 2012 determination was used in that context.
With regards to my comments on the parameters of design, corridors are generally designed on the assumption that they will me managed as relatively fire sterile areas; the fact that they are not always so managed and/or an arsonist might actually introduce a fire loading (a good example would be the scrotes who set fire to tyres within single stairways of high rise residential blocks).