.....Wiz its not the principles that Fire Officers use, its the principles of means of escape fire safety professionals in general use.
I thought they were one and the same thing!
I have no problem understanding that some buildings do not require automatic detection and this has nothing to do with the point I am making.
I have no problem understanding that a fire risk assessment may conclude that something completely at variance with the design principles of BS5839-1 is required in some exceptional circumstances, and this has nothing to do with the point I am making.
What I don't understand is that 'the principles of escape that fire safety professionals generally use' could include installing an automatic smoke detector in an 'access' room to 'protect' the occupants of an 'inner' room, but deciding that
no automatic detection was required in the corridor serving that 'access' room just because the corridor itself 'provided two different means of escape'. If that corridor itself was smoke-logged (before someone tried to escape from the 'inner' room) because it had no automatic detector installed, then the detector in the 'access' room has hardly provided a solution to the person potentially being trapped in the 'inner' room! It might as well not be installed - they are trapped anyway.
If any automatic detection is to be installed in a building then surely covering
all the escape routes is the first basic design objective (Cat. L4)?