First - thanks for all your responses - the users of this BBS rarely fail to respond and the debate is usually illuminating!
For the sake of clarity, the premises is fire engineered and the suppliers of the new facility as a whole employed a team of fire engineering consultants to produce a fire safety strategy supporting their design. We are stuck with them, as we do not employ them directly.
Their consultants specified the Category of the system to be installed and the use of point smoke detectors. They design the building, build it, including all the services, then pass it over to us to operate. They appear unconcerned at the cost of supplying/installing the system, as are we, because we do not pay any extra if it is expensive to procure and install.
HOWEVER, they don't appear to care that, once they hand it over, it will be (so my maintenance contractors tell me) a costly and disruptive nightmare to maintain! Try as I might, I cannot find any way, either contractually or based upon BS/EN standards, codes of practice etc, to force them to give us something that is economically maintainable. I am coming to the conclusion that we shall be faced with ripping out this brand-new system and replacing it with something that we can maintain without jeopardising our operations. I was hoping that there was some standard - maybe not specificlly related to fire systems - that obligated the suppliers of engineering to consider the practicability of its maintenance during their design process.
PS the insurers appear only concerned that we have a system which complies with all the relevant standards.