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DESIGNING FOR FIRE SAFETY PARTS 1,2,3 and 4

DESIGNING FOR FIRE SAFETY PARTS 1,2,3 and 4. “A re-visit to the interpretations and applications of the Uniform Building By-Laws 1984”. And revisions to Fire Safety Provisions Selangor Uniform Building (amendment)(no2) By-Laws 2012. Ar Chong Lee Siong APAM MIFireE MMIArbs.

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DESIGNING FOR FIRE SAFETY PARTS 1,2,3 and 4

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  1. DESIGNING FOR FIRE SAFETY PARTS 1,2,3 and 4 “A re-visit to the interpretations and applications of the Uniform Building By-Laws 1984” And revisions to Fire Safety Provisions Selangor Uniform Building (amendment)(no2) By-Laws 2012 Ar Chong Lee Siong APAM MIFireE MMIArbs PAM CPD SEMINAR

  2. Uniform Building By-Laws 1984 is a “PRESCRIPTIVE” BUILDING CODE • Compliance with this code is a requirement by law • Sets rules and regulations on the application of the code • Provides pre-determined prescriptions The prescriptions are absolute : no smaller than…….. no bigger than…….. no shorter than…… no longer than…… or no less than and no more than.

  3. CONCEPTS OF FIRE SAFETY 1 EVACUATION 2 PASSIVE CONTAINMENT 3 ACTIVE INTERVENTION 4 ACCESS FOR FIRE FIGHTING AND RESCUE

  4. occupants Contributing factors to designing for evacuation • Numbers and distribution • State of mind • Familiarity of place • Physical mobility

  5. buildings Contributing factors to designing for evacuation • Detection and alarm • Complexity of plan • Passive and active systems These factors lead to the designation of purpose groups in the Fifth Schedule, UBBL

  6. Designation of purpose group • UBBL 5th schedule • UBBL 134 • UBBL 135, 136, 137, 138, 139 • Every building is to have one overall designation • Individual components of building with different usage from overall must be designed to accommodate the more stringent requirement, and where these requirements ‘spill’ into the other parts of the building, the more stringent requirement applies. • Only ‘horizontal’ separation is allowed between buildings of different purpose groups

  7. PURPOSE GROUP I : Small Residential II : Institutional III : Other Residential V : Shop VII : Place of Assembly

  8. MIXED USE BUILDINGS BASIC CONCEPT part of building use/purpose grp : hotel/iii HT. 1 to be used for compliance with Schedules 6,7,9,10 of By-law. A- HOTEL part B of building use/purpose grp : SHOPS/V HT. 2 to be used for compliance with Schedules 6,7,9,10 of By-law. HT. 1 B-SHOPS Vertical compartment wall separating Purpose Groups III & V -By-Law 215 HT. 2 b- shops Ground level Ground level Compartment floor above basement By-Law 138(d) C-CARPARKS part C of building use/purpose grp : basement parking/viii depth/ht. 3 to be used for compliance with Schedules 7,9,10 of By-law. Depth 3 c - basement

  9. EVACUATION • Detection • Alarm • Exits • Travel distance • Components • Capacity of exits Accepted assumption in designing for safe evacuation: “Only one fire at one location at a time”

  10. Flashover Untenable condition Stage 1 Ignition & growth Stage 2 development Stage 3 Full fire Stage 4 Decay NATURE OF FIRE Temperature / size Time

  11. Available Safe Egress Time ASET detection alarm Untenable condition movement Total evacuation ignition Required Safe Egress Time RSET Temperature / size Time Factor of safety: RSET < 0.75 ASET

  12. exit • Final exit • ‘Alternative exits’ • Storey exit • Horizontal exit • Exit route

  13. Final exit • UBBL 133 – interpretations • Final exit refers to the threshold that separates “still within the building” and “out of the building”. The liability of the design for evacuation from the building ends at this point.

  14. ‘Alternative exits’ • UBBL 166 • This is the primary concept for safe evacuation. Every floor space shall be provided with at least two exits on the basis that if one exit is inoperable, the other exit can serve the function. • This ‘designing for redundancy’ principle applies to all aspects of evacuation.

  15. Alternative exits Final exit Alternative exits Final exit Final exit

  16. Horizontal exit • UBBL 171 • Exits that lead to an adjacent (horizontal) separated compartment within the same floor

  17. Storey exit • UBBL 167, 174 • Exits from a floor which is of a different level from the final exit, or, if on the same level, a distance away from the final exit. • A storey exit is to lead to a final exit.

  18. Exit route • UBBL 133 – interpretations • UBBL 169 • the protected passage from a storey exit that leads to the final exit. • Can include spaces that are designated as areas of refuge anywhere between the storey exit and the final exit

  19. Travel distance Travel distance Travel distance storey exit Final exit Exit route horizontal exit Final exit

  20. Travel distance • UBBL 165 • 7th Schedule • Dead end • initial travel distance before a point where an alternative path becomes available • Direct distance • Stipulates that travel distance must be measured along the actual path of travel • Open plan • Where an actual path of travel cannot be determined, the direct distance can be measured as a straight line direct to the exit. Permitted travel distance is then reduced to 2/3.

  21. Evacuation : small area

  22. Evacuation : larger area

  23. UBBL 165 (B) Max 15m if room < 6 pax Final exits To comply with dead end and travel distance Max distance is 15m within room plus max allowable travel distance From door of room to final exit Evacuation : multiple areas

  24. Final exits UBBL 165 (B) Max 15m2 and < 6 pax Travel distance measured from door if room is less than 15m2 and with less than 6 occupants Evacuation : multiple areas

  25. Horizontal exits storey exits Evacuation : multiple areas

  26. 2 3 1 Horizontal exits

  27. 2 2 1 Horizontal exits

  28. components • Exit door • Exit discharge • Protected corridor • Protected staircase • Balcony approach • Single staircase

  29. Exit door, exit discharge • UBBL 173 • UBBL 186 • UBBL 193 • UBBL 133 - interpretations • ‘Door’ refers to the physical door installed at an exit, and all its functional components e.g. locksets, latches, hinges and closers • ‘discharge’ refers to the ‘doorway’ or threshold of an exit

  30. Exit door, exit discharge • Not all fire rated doors are exit doors • Not all exit doors need to be fire doors • Not all doors need to be exit doors • Not all doors can be exit doors • Exit doors must always be able to be opened (without undue effort) at all times • Exit discharge must always allow the passage of people at all times • ‘Exit’ in this context means storey exit, horizontal exit or final exit

  31. Final exit Final exit Evacuation : separation of routes

  32. Protected corridor, protected staircase • UBBL 133-interpretations • UBBL 157, 189, 190, 191 • While not expressed, it is inferred from the UBBL that all components that form the Exit Route shall be of protected construction. • Using the same inference, ‘protected’ shall mean ‘enclosed’, ‘separated’ or ‘isolated’

  33. Single stair • UBBL 194 • Special provision for the common ‘shop-house’ design • Usage limited to shop (ground floor only), residential or office. • Uppermost floor level limited to 12m

  34. SINGLE STAIRCASE PROVISION UBBL 194 Domestic or office use Height of topmost floor < 12m Shop or car park Assumed Room of occupancy < 6 Diagram 4.4.8.1. Height of topmost floor of building with single staircase 12m max. not more 12m 12m max. Diagram 4.4.8.2. Maximum travel distance By-Law 194 stipulates when a single staircase may be permitted. Essentially, this is only allowed where the occupancy above ground level is confined to either domestic or office purposes. The ground floor may be used for shops or car parks. (shop offices, shop houses) All elements of structure shall have a FRP of not less than one hour except the enclosure for the staircase at the ground floor where the wall shall have an FRP of not less than two hours, assuming the ground floor will not be used for residential purposes.

  35. 194. Building with single staircase. • A single staircase may be permitted inthe following premises: • any dwellings at a height of 12 metres measured from the fire appliance access level to the highest and lowest floor; and • any shophouses or dwellings not exceeding two (2) storeys or the first storey not exceeding 6 metres from the ground level.

  36. Clause 194 (b) : single staircase for shop house Single staircase House only House/ office <=12m <= 6m Shop 1) House only on upper floor 2) No more than 2 storeys 3) Height of first floor no more than 6m above ground level Clause 166 and 167 (not less than two exits) shall apply for other building types

  37. Capacity of exits • UBBL 7th Schedule • UBBL 175, 176, 178 • Occupant load • Exit width • Application of horizontal exit

  38. Sample calculation Scenario 1: upper floor assembly area in an institutional building Stair A Stair B 50m Occupancy load (UBBL 180(b)) =1.35m2/pax 1000m2 / 1.35m2 = 741 persons Assume lobby C is inaccessible, Therefore A and B must accommodate total occupancy 741 / 2 stairs =371 persons per stair VII persons per unit for stair = 75 371 / 75 = 4.95, say 5 5 x 0.55m = 2.75m width each stair 20m C = horizontal exit, persons per unit = 100 371 pax / 100 = 3.71, 3.71 x 0.55m = 2.04 m min width for lobby C Lobby C

  39. Sample calculation Scenario 2: upper floor assembly area in an institutional building Stair A Stair B 15m 35m Assume C inaccessible, either B or D Must accommodate 519 / 2 exits =260 persons B = stair = 75 pax per unit 260/ 75 = 3.47 3.47 x 0.55m = 1.9m width D = horizontal exit = 100 pax per unit 260/ 100 = 2.6 2.6 x 0.55m = 1.43m width 222 persons 519 persons 20m 222 persons door D Lobby C

  40. 250 pax 250 pax 400 pax 400 pax 150 pax 200 pax 400 pax 300 pax 400 pax 200 pax 400 pax storey exit Final exit Exit route horizontal exit Final exit

  41. 7th Schedule : Maximum Travel Distance 9 6 60 UBBL 1984 provisions shown in RED 10 10 45 0 30 45 60 30 45 45 22.5 0 61 NR NRNR NR 22.5 30 30 45 NR NR 22.5 22.5

  42. 7th Schedule : Occupant Load and capacity of exits UBBL 1984 provisions shown in RED 22 100 60 60 60 45 ------OFFICE ------SHOP

  43. Compartmentation • Size limitations of ‘compartments’ • Fire Resistance Ratings of ‘elements of structure’

  44. Compartmentation • To contain the spread of fire from point of origin • To limit the potential size of the fire • To separate areas of different levels of hazard • To separate areas for safe exit, evacuation or refuge • To limit threat to the structural integrity of the building • To allow sufficient time for safe evacuation, active extinguishment of fire and rescue.

  45. compartmentation • Surface area / volume of combustible content (A) • Combustion heat per area / volume (B) • Fire Load = (A) x (B) Fire Load

  46. Flashover Untenable condition Stage 1 Ignition & growth Stage 2 development Stage 3 Full fire Stage 4 Decay NATURE OF FIRE Temperature / size Time

  47. EQUAL VOLUME ‘high’ Btu Temperature / size ‘moderate’ Btu ‘low’ Btu Time

  48. EQUAL Btu Temperature / size ‘high’ volume ‘moderate’ volume ‘low’ volume Time

  49. EQUAL VOLUME EQUAL Btu ‘high’ Btu Temperature / size Temperature / size ‘moderate’ Btu ‘high’ volume ‘low’ Btu ‘moderate’ volume ‘low’ volume Time Time Purpose Group classification Prescription of Fire Resistance Rating Limitation of Floor Areas and Volume

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