I have recently inspected a three storey building used as offices. Alternative external escape from all floors and one protected internal staircase. Existing alarm consists of manual call points with smoke detection in protected staircase and in a couple of risk rooms. I believe this to be sufficient, yet a fire alarm installer has now recommended upgrading to L2 system to comply with new regs. Have I missed something? Any views would be welcome.
Is the access to the internal and external staircases protected by smoke detection (i.e. - the corridors leading to same).
Aside from an L5 system (which is for a specific solution to a specific requirement) the minimum an L4 system would cover is the staircases plus corridors leading them.Additional detection over and above this in areas of specific risk would still be counted as part of the main category design (L4) - presently (and Im assuming that there is a corridor) your current system in this case would not be an L4.An L2 would be additional detection in the corridor plus rooms leading onto it.
However,I agree that the use of the words
"recommended" and
"to comply" is sales man talk but it may be valid in this case.
Something that might fit this situation is a site I used to maintain in Belfast that was a three storey old house converted into offices.It had a main front door with a front staircase,from which there was access to three offices on each floor.There was also an external rear staircase that the first and second floor offices had access to. Detection had been installed in the front staircase at the ground,first and second floors.My point on this one was that although there was a straight (-ish) corridor within the offices between the two exits there was no protection for this escape route if you were in one of the offices off it.Client was in agreement that,as a minimum,they install detection in the office escape routes to the actual staircases.