Designing for Resilience: From Compliance to Continuity
Fire safety design has traditionally been framed around compliance.
The Missing Client Voice in Fire Strategy
Fire strategies are often highly technical documents. They describe fire scenarios, model outputs, escape provisions, and system performance.
But there is a simple question that is not always asked clearly enough.
What does the client actually need this building to do in a fire?
Life Safety Is Not the Whole Story
Fire engineering is intended to be a design tool. A means of developing solutions that achieve clearly defined fire safety objectives.
But there is an uncomfortable reality.
It is sometimes used the other way around.
When Fire Engineering Becomes Justification, Not Design
Fire engineering has enabled a generation of innovative buildings. It allows designers to move beyond prescriptive rules and develop solutions tailored to the specific needs of a project.
But it also raises a fundamental question.
Stay Put vs Evacuation: Are We Quietly Rewriting the Rules?
The debate around Residential Personal Emergency Evacuation Plans is often framed as a question of inclusion.
Who needs help?
Who is at risk?
What is the right thing to do?
These are important questions. But they are not the most important question?
RPEEPs: Intention, Reality, and the Risk of Getting It Wrong
There are few areas of fire safety that expose the gap between policy ambition and operational reality quite as starkly as Residential Personal Emergency Evacuation Plans.
Hazardous Area Classification: When Is Zoning Actually Needed?
Hazardous area classification is often seen as the defining feature of a DSEAR assessment. Zones, drawings, and equipment ratings quickly become the focus.
But zoning is not the starting point. It is the outcome.
To DSEAR or Not to DSEAR?
DSEAR is often treated as a specialist add-on. Something required for high-hazard industrial sites, fuel depots, or chemical plants.
That is not what the regulations say.
If You Don’t Set the Objective, You Don’t Control the Outcome
Fire safety design often begins with solutions. Sprinklers are added. Stairs are checked. Smoke control is introduced. Compliance is demonstrated. But a more fundamental question is frequently left unasked. What is the building actually trying to achieve in fire?
Lithium-Ion Battery Fires and Portable Extinguishers: A Question of Expectation
A recent CROSS-UK report highlights a growing issue in the market: portable fire extinguishers labelled as suitable for lithium-ion battery fires.