Simply put "fire protection" is not seamless. Often enough it's a
patchwork of pieces and parts assembled without a clear and common
objective. We see this everyday with smoke detectors being installed in
unsprinklered elevator hoistways because no one told the alarm engineer
that sprinklers had been eliminated by the sprinkler engineer, or fire
dampers installed in one hour walls in fully sprinklered buildings
because no one told the mechanical engineer. The disconnect with the
fire service is yet another example, site planning left to the civil
engineer without regard to fire protection needs.

What we need are MEPF firms, engineering firms that employ and fully
utilize fire protection engineers to look at the big picture, assess,
plan, design, coordinate and supervise cost effective and efficient fire
protection solutions. 

If as a fire protection engineer you're simply designing fire alarm or
sprinkler systems you are not working to your full potential !  There
are firms that provide life safety analysis to provide passive fire
protection solutions, often coined working for the "dark side" they
nonetheless do what others are not, looking at the big picture. High
rise sprinklers in Chicago or San Diego anyone ? 

So how does the active fire protection community counter this claim,
perhaps by long term planning, synergistic value driven engineering. It
goes all the way back to codes and standards, how many cycles did it
take to recognize sprinklers in fully sprinklered buildings for
notification survivability on fire alarm systems ?

One stop shopping ladies and gentlemen, one stop shopping.

Sincerely

John Drucker
Fire Protection Subcode Official (AHJ)
Building/Fire/Electrical Inspector

Safe Buildings Save Lives !



-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris
Cahill
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2009 10:36 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: another fire - this will be interesting

Ron said "(I suspect the savings in mains, hydrants, fire stations,
apparatus and firefighters is way more than a wash in fully sprinklered,
planned communities than the cost of sprinklering schools)."

Were these savings realized?  Last I read which was a long time ago
there was very little saved on the reduction in the list you provided.
They never actually followed through in reducing mains and limiting
stations etc.  I will certainly say in the macro scale these saving are
not being fully realized.  Hell we still have fully paid stations in
many departments that average < 1 call a day and plenty more that are <
2.  As a pay-per-call volunteer I saw more fire than many paid guys in
these parts.  

Chris Cahill, P.E.
Fire Protection Engineer
Sentry Fire Protection, Inc.
 
763-658-4483
763-658-4921 fax
 
Email: [email protected]
 
Mail: P.O. Box 69
        Waverly, MN 55390
 
Location: 4439 Hwy 12 SW
              Waverly, MN 55390

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ron
Greenman
Sent: Friday, January 02, 2009 2:05 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: another fire - this will be interesting

Good point so far overlooked. There's also the dubious "saved
foundation" success that may have not been worth the risk of going into
harm's way. And no one has brought up the environmental advantages of
sprinklers--less smoke, less destroyed building materials to dispose of,
less dirty water to process and, of course, less water used overall. And
the Scottsdale less public money spent on firefighting infrastructure (I
suspect the savings in mains, hydrants, fire stations, apparatus and
firefighters is way more than a wash in fully sprinklered, planned
communities than the cost of sprinklering schools).

On Fri, Jan 2, 2009 at 11:49 AM, Dave <[email protected]> wrote:
> Since we are offering up various thoughts and theories on the general
application of sprinklers .....  Regardless of how much egress time is
allegedly available or occupant ability to respond or even construction
materials & methods - there still is a fire in a building -  Presuming
we get everyone out safely and that eliminates the 'life safety need for
sprinklers' will we then NOT call the fire department to respond??
>
> Once there's a fire in a building there is another completely real 
> life
hazard in play - the responding emergency personnel.  Some may enter the
building and be very close to harm's way and others may respond and have
ancillary functions - traffic control, EMS, crowds etc.  Regardless of
the specifics we can generally agree that a fire in a non-sprinklered
building will be larger than the same fire in a sprinklered building.
It's not always the fire but medical emergencies or trips & falls that
create the threat of harm.  The larger the fire the greater its duration
and intensity
- all of which increase exposure and life safety risk to responders.
>
> Personally I don't get behind the non-combustible and limited or low 
> fuel
load argument as a valid application of sprinkler omission.  Maybe thats
just my narrow focus or perhaps its because I've been to alot bigger
fires in non-sprinklered buildings than sprinklered buildings.  The
closer you get to the gun - the bigger the bullet.
>
> Thanks & Happy New Year
> Dave P.
> Fireman first and always.
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>



--
Ron Greenman
at home....
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