Just visited a very interesting premises. one that, i think, polarises the order and the codes.
A public building. occupancy potential in the hundreds. Over three floors B,G & 1 (all open to each other). There is no detection, No means of giving warning. no comparmentation, single direction of travell of up to 45m. some of which is via a helical staircase that is of insufficient width. as far as code compliance goes its as bad as it gets.
Heres the twist. Its internal environment is cavernous and is permanently controlled to be very very humid. everything you see is covered in water, pretty much dripping wet.
The F. Engineer wants to put in all kinds of control measures and upgrade certain aspects to acheive some kind of compliance. He looked completely gobsmacked when i said why are you recommending all that. I think its unnecessary.
From a fire safety order perspective. i can't see a justification for the work being recommended. This is probably the least likely place a fire could start. So where is the risk of fire?
If there is (virtually) no risk of a fire taking hold, because its environment acts as a permanent fire suppressant, then why should we enforce the order to a code standard?
I said to him that my view was any fire engineer could easily demonstrate what was the likelihood of a fire occuring, whether it could develop and to what extent. and as such easily justify the current arrangements. He looked at me like i had just probed him.
Does anyone else think i'm a borderline nutter for saying its ok. or do any of you see it from my point of view?