William. Not sure why you say terraced street is not the same, I'd be interested to know why (not saying you are wrong, merely curious).
When you say what if re the limited ceiling, if it's reconstructed for 60min FR then cant we all go down a list of what ifs forever and a day? If we are talking about saving life here i'm not sure what point you are making. Again, treading carefully I'm just interested... call it learning if you will.
Lastly, your point about barriers you are saying difficult to manage. If a property if risk assessed every 3 years, contractor works are checked when complete, aren't you again stating a potential, not a fact?
And I also agree regarding the potential for fir to enter the flat from an external point. But the property will have AFD and it can be upgraded.
Dave, that's good to hear. Will the document be something housing managers can pick up and make decisions with? That is the test.
Colin I totally agree it does not make it acceptable if the standard is not to what we would all expect, my point being, no one is telling anyone that they must identify shortcomings in all existing buildings and put it right.
and believe me when I say I am well aware of your work Colin and have the utmost respect for you. I wasn't referring to landlords writing guidance. I was referring to fire safety professionals that are responsible for, and who work in housing day to day. Customer facing. Working alongside housing and estate managers. How often is clear corridor debated in this forum. We know it makes sense. Fire authorities know it makes sense. But when you are faced with residents who are genuinely distressed by a clear corridor policy, that wasn't in place when they moved in whenever that may be, no guidance provides solutions to this. I'll give you an example to make my point. You cannot have a chair mid point on a stairwell for all obvious reasons. I'm the only person I know that has suggested to one client to install effectively a drop down shower chair. People that cant manage a flight of stairs in one go, people living in flats with no room to swing a cat let alone store a mobility walking frame so they put them in the corridor. I know one housing provider that has a clear corridor policy, yet a particular FA has allowed their residents in one location to store their scooters in side at the bottom of a stairwell, with no alternative MOE for the residents in the upper flats.
What I'm saying, is housing providers need to find solutions to these issues, and they have. But what will be agreeable with one fire authority wont necessarily be OK with another. And that's where guidance can help.
Slightly off point regarding my original post though. As is typical with fire safety, we will not all agree. I'm merely trying to see if the issue could be resolved without thinking the very worst is definitely going to happen regardless.