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Adam Bannister is a contributor to IFSEC Global, having been in the role of Editor from 2014 through to November 2019. Adam also had stints as a journalist at cybersecurity publication, The Daily Swig, and as Managing Editor at Dynamis Online Media Group.
A roundtable debate about fire engineering in modern steel buildings has yielded several recommendations for further discussion around regulation, compliance and awareness throughout the supply chain.
Organised by leading coatings manufacturer Sherwin-Williams Protective & Marine Coatings the discussion set out to clarify how and where responsibility for fire protection should fall in the construction of increasingly complex steel structures.
From an architect to the Fire Service and RISCauthority, the debate brought together leading professionals from a range of sectors involved in the construction of modern architecture.
Held at the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE) central London the discussion – which I chaired as IFSEC Global editor (and of which I will next week publish a longer transcript) – examined issues of responsibility for fire engineering safety in the supply chain from the architect to the installing contractor.
Unsafe design
Bob Glendenning, Manager of Fire Engineering at Sherwin-Williams Protective & Marine Coatings, outlined the three key concerns that had prompted the decision to organise the roundtable.
“With regards to the design element of the fire protection, there is unsafe design due to ignorance, there is unsafe design due to bad practice such as assuming utilisation and web stability of cellular beams, and there is unsafe design by design.
“By that I mean the kind of design which explicitly excludes adherence to the existing guidance because of time, cost or due to the design being purely ambient.”
Paul Bussey of the Regulations and Standards Group at the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), said his profession had “to know at little about a lot” and had a tough job understanding their responsibilities vis-à-vis fire engineering.
“From an architect’s standpoint, you would not know what level of protection is relevant unless a building is purpose-built,” he said. “It is a matter of risk, and most buildings don’t catch fire.
“There is a disconnect between the designers and the contractors and the fire engineering protection is now so complex that even architects struggle to find their way through guidance.”
Danny Hopkin, Chair of the Institute of Fire Engineers Fire Resistance Special Interest Group, bemoaned a lack of awareness among building owners or managers of buildings regarding the statutory requirements. He also noted that much fire protection guidance is around 50 years old.
Fire Protection Association technical director Dr Jim Glockling was a prominent voice in the discussion. As well as talking extensively about the insurance industry’s role in fire engineering he suggested that architects, designers and estimators from the top down should all be better informed about developments in design and fire protection.
Building Information Modelling
Observing that fire protection only becomes tangible at the end of the risk process Dr Glockling also mooted the idea of fire protection being incorporated into Building Information Modelling (BIM). Sherwin-Williams had already been doing this for several years, said Bob Glendenning.
While there seemed little appetite for additional legislation, there was a feeling that ageing legislation perhaps needed updating to reflect the unique demands of modern steel buildings.
It was also agreed that steps should be taken to raise awareness of the pertinent issues across relevant levels of the supply chain, of design and installation, from architects through to estimators including building control officers.
This in turn would drive the work being undertaken by the Institute of Fire Engineers (IFE) on Building Regulations.
The model adopted in Ireland, where building control sign-off has been tightened, was also suggested as worthy of emulation, while delegates agreed that a third-party scheme to regulate the design process should be considered too.
The delegates at the event were:
Bob Glendenning, Manager, Fire Engineering, Sherwin-Williams Protective & Marine Coatings
Prof Ed Galea, University of Greenwich Fire Engineering Group
Paul Bussey, Regulations and Standards Group, RIBA
Jim Glockling, Technical Director, Fire Protection Association
Gareth Steele, Fire Engineering Group, London Fire Brigade
Danny Hopkin, Chair of the Institute of Fire Engineers Fire Resistance Special Interest Group
Niall Rowan, Technical Officer, Association of Specialist Fire Protection
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Roundtable on Fire Engineering in Modern Steel Structures: Key RecommendationsAn industry debate has taken place that set out to clarify where responsibility for fire protection should fall in construction of steel buildings.
Adam Bannister
IFSEC Insider | Security and Fire News and Resources
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