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Introduction to Fire Safety Management

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<strong>Fire</strong> door<br />

<strong>Fire</strong>-resisting wall<br />

Self-closing<br />

by walls and/or fl oors, thereby restricting the growth and<br />

spread of fi res in buildings.<br />

Effective compartmentation limits the extent of<br />

damage caused by the heat and smoke from a fi re,<br />

which, in turn, will have direct and signifi cant implications<br />

for the business continuity and resilience of occupants of<br />

the building.<br />

Compartmentation is also used as a means of<br />

preventing fi re spread between adjacent buildings.<br />

Compartmentation can be achieved horizontally within a<br />

fl oor area or vertically between fl oors. Compartmentation<br />

is also used <strong>to</strong> create areas of relative safety for<br />

occupants escaping from fi re.<br />

Horizontal compartmentation<br />

In a single s<strong>to</strong>rey building or on any one level of a multis<strong>to</strong>rey<br />

building, compartmentation can be applied:<br />

(a) To meet travel distances requirements (see later)<br />

(b) To enclose specifi c fi re hazards<br />

(c) To assist progressive horizontal evacuation<br />

(d) To assist a phased evacuation<br />

(e) To separate areas of different:<br />

➤ Occupancy<br />

➤ Risk category<br />

➤ Standards of fi re resistance or<br />

➤ Means of escape<br />

SC<br />

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<strong>Fire</strong> protection in buildings<br />

Figure 9.6 Example of the horizontal subdivision within a fl oor which limits fi re spread and protects the means of<br />

escape<br />

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Final exit<br />

(f) Where individual compartments are <strong>to</strong>o large and<br />

exceed the limit for the standard of fi re resistance<br />

proposed<br />

(g) Where it is desirable or necessary for the occupants<br />

<strong>to</strong> stay in a building involved in a fi re for as long as<br />

possible, for operational or safety reasons, e.g. an<br />

air traffi c control centre; intensive therapy unit, the<br />

control centre of an oil rig.<br />

Vertical<br />

In multi-s<strong>to</strong>rey buildings, each s<strong>to</strong>rey of any non-domestic<br />

building should be a separate compartment. Each<br />

compartment should be capable of sustaining the<br />

<strong>to</strong>tal destruction of the compartment involved without<br />

permitting the fi re <strong>to</strong> spread <strong>to</strong> other fl oors. This vertical<br />

compartmentation also protects occupants of the building<br />

who might have <strong>to</strong> pass the s<strong>to</strong>rey involved in fi re<br />

while escaping. Finally vertical compartmentation also<br />

provides a degree of protection <strong>to</strong> fi re fi ghters working<br />

on s<strong>to</strong>reys immediately above or below the fi re.<br />

<strong>Fire</strong> resistance<br />

Compartment walls and other elements of structure are<br />

normally required <strong>to</strong> have a degree of resistance <strong>to</strong> fi re.<br />

Obviously any element of structure that was unable <strong>to</strong><br />

177

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