Wee Brians argument was based around pointing out the fault in our own logic.
Ok. Awkward head going on...
I have just bought a fully functioning 6 storey hotel from Kurnal.... (Gave me it cheap he did too)
I am going to run the first 3 storeys just as a hotel.
The top three floors I am going to rent out, to 15 of my unrelated minimum wage workforce.
I am going to convert one room on each floor into a kitchen for the floor to share, it already has a FD30S door on it so should meet any other guidance I can be bothered to consider.
I am going to completely remove the detection from the rooms in this area apart from the kitchen, and replace it with detection in the corridor only. (I don't want my own staff causing evacuations)
Community fire safety can come talk to my tenants and give them some free smoke detectors if required.
Show me any part of the housing act that says that this can not be a HMO. (I am not suggesting that you can't, just that I have looked and I can't find it.
However, if it is not a HMO, then are you also saying that the rooms are not private and domestic? If so should you really enforce the replacement of the L2 system? How would I stand arguing that they ARE domestic because people are living there, as their permanent home, referrring you to the case law that nearlythere pointed us towards.
(I think this is Kurnals problem. If the FRS involved are happy with detection in the common area only, are they really saying that as far as they are concerned it is private & domestic use. If it is truly domestic then the RRO won't apply to the rooms but then housing act needs to be considered. Kurnal either needs to say that the rooms are not domestic, and as such he will be recommending a higher level of fire alarm than the FRS has asked for, or if he says they are actually domestic then he is having to suggest that the RP pays for a HMO licence, which the FRS haven't mentioned. So Kurnal looks like the bad guy. Am I reading this right Kurnal?)