Hello,
I have seen a building with sleeping accommodation (single person rooms) along a corridor in a larger building (all one occupation). There are defects in the walls around the building that include small holes (1/2cm diameter) where wires have been passed through, larger holes (5cm wide) and in the sleeping area the walls and between the rooms and the escape corridor have not been finished on both sides. The effect of this is that the walls will provide 30 minute protection instead of 60 minutes if the plasterboard walls met the ceiling on the other side. The Architects initial response to this to say that none of the walls separating the rooms used for sleeping are fire compartment ones and all of the rooms are in one compartment and so fire sealing the individual room is not necessary (they accept though that walls between fire compartments do need to be complete).
Compartmentalisation and compartments - to me these are separate things. Compartments are the areas that might be 60 min fire rated that for the structure of the building and protect staircases and would be part of building safety as well as fire safety. Compartmentalisation is different and would be concerned with all the other walls, ceilings and floors that might affect the means of escape and breaches would need to be fire stopped. Is there a different terminology I should be using?
So does sleeping accommodation always have to have 60 mins, in the room itself, and along the escape route?
FM