Hi Golden - thanks for taking the time to come back on this, the property is in London, so if you know anyone local?
There are two staircases, one is "protected" by really bad fire doors, the other is the main accommodation stair which is only protected (again by bad fire doors) on a couple of levels, most floors are open on that side of the building so you come out of your flat doors and there is the lift and the stairs.
Escape is possible in either direction from the vast majority of the flats, as you can go round the whole triangle on each level accessing either staircase. As you go higher up the building though there are some flats that are in dead end conditions so anyone coming out of these can only go in one direction past, maybe one or two flats, before they reach that same route from which escape is possible in both directions.
Not sure what deck access is, but the building is built, kind of like a triangle, around a central, open core. The flats (with their kitchen windows and dodgy doors) open out onto these corridors. The opposite side of each corridor has windows all round, which look into this open core. (Think of a sausage bent into a triangle and you have the image!) Just to add to the fun, there are several shops and restaurants beneath, their skylight roofs are level with floor one of the property and fill this inner core. From the first floor up to the roof in this core is just open space. There are 3 separate extraction systems which lead from the restaurants beneath, are affixed to the brickwork of this inner core and finish are roof level of the residential part (apparently this extraction has caught fire as well in the past).
I too hate the idea of evacuation (most of the residents don't speak English, a lot have medical issues, most are short term rental) and getting the message across will be nigh-on impossible.
Golden, would a fire engineer be able to confirm if a stay put is still safe, I thought a structural engineer was perhaps the way to go? Or maybe I should organise a working party and pay both to come along?! I'm beginning to feel stuck between a rock and a hard place here!
Need something pretty solid to be able to ignore the insurance company and the "advice" from F&RS and not install.
Thanks in advance for further thoughts and any competent person recommendations.