Here's an interesting one...
When programming the controller for an evacuation lift (evacuation only - not a fire-fighting lift) for a building that has a fire detection and alarm system, what should the lift be programmed to do, upon activation of the fire alarm? Does it...
- act like a fire-fighting lift - returning automatically to final access/egress level and staying there until it is taken under staff control, or...
- does it keep responding to lift calls, until staff throw the 'evacuation lift' switch referred to in BS5588-8, whereupon it comes under lift-car override or;
- is some other mode appropriate?
The first would seem safest - if anyone's in the lift at the time they will get taken straight back to the level from which they can most easily escape. Staff then go to this level and take the lift under control - they are therefore confirming that the escape route is available and safe to use. However...
The second might speed up evacuation, because the disabled can self-evacuate, or anyone helping with a PEEP can operate the lift themselves.
BS 5588-8 doesn't appear to preclude either mode of operation, and BS EN 81-73 (Safety rules for the construction and installation of lifts — Particular applications for passenger and goods passenger lifts —
Part 73: Behaviour of lifts in the event of fire) excludes evacuation lifts from its scope.
You might say "it should do whatever the fire safety strategy requires", and to a certain extent that's fine, but in the development of the Strategy we should understand what represents 'best practice' in this respect. In the absence of any BS / EN or other guidance (there's nothing in the RR(FS)O guides, either), this appears to be completely unknown.
Any feedback...?