Right. How about another spanner in the works.
Fire risk assessment is all about taking reasonably practicable measures to reduce the level of risk in existing buildings. The smoke alarm achieves this perfectly in the example of the petrol station shop.
But if I was designing a new petrol station shop with an inner room and submitting the design for Building Regulations approval is it reasonable then to incorporate a domestic type smoke alarm? Or do we think the BCO should reject the design?
The diffenence is surely that the fire risk assessment is carried out under the Fire Safety Order and the BCO is concerned with the Building Regs and his benchmark standard would be ADB - Building's Other Than Dwellings, so would be under no obligation to accept a smoke detector for a dwelling.
While you can argue that satisfactory means of escape in a building should be the same in a new build as an existing building, but doesn't 'reasonable practicable' change: Just had a quick look, and new petrol stations cost between £500k and £1.2M, it could be argued that the cost in terms of 'trouble time and money' of a fire alarm to cover this risk may be less interms of the cost of the new build, but could be more in terms of whatever business is occupying an old building that never had an Fire Alarm (say it's an independant seller, their only premises) - therefore not reasonably practicable to control the risk by installing a full alarm and AFD to cover the inner room in an existing building, but a domestic detector is?
As one of my old bosses used to say: is a FRA not comparable to a car's MOT? The MOT standard is one that you shouldn't let your car fall below, but you'd never build a new one to MOT standards?