High Rise Buildings2
High Rise Buildings2
High Rise Buildings2
High-rise Design
Most are designed:
High-rise Design
Design features defeated by:
Flammable finishes and furnishings
Improper installation of plumbing and wiring
renovations
High-rise Design
As the number of occupants increases,
Engineering, Enforcement, Education
become increasingly important.
If occupants fail to do their part, only an
aggressive fire attack will save them.
Occupant Education
Occupants must be taught
Prevent panic
Control access to the building
Elevators
HVAC
Communications
Suppression systems
Requires
Types of High-rises
Pre WWII style
Types of High-rises
Post WWII
HVAC Problems
Smoke and heat on multiple floors
Difficult to find location of fire
Circulating smoke
Programming of HVAC systems can be + / Duct detectors and dampers
Pressurized / vented stairwells
High-rise Operations
Initial deployment is critical.
Locate the fire.
Determine extent and likely path for extension.
Deploy to confine and extinguish.
High-rise Operations
Difficult to Extinguish
High heat
Limited access
Large open spaces and voids
Partitions and cubicles
High fire flow required
RESCUE
Labor intensive
Utilize search ropes tied to anchor points
Evacuation
EXPOSURES
Other compartments on the fire floor
Upper floors via ductwork, voids,
knockouts, and open stairwell doors
Upper floor via exterior spread
Adjacent high-rise structures
VENTILATION
HVAC system MAY be designed to remove
smoke IF heat and fire have not effected the
duct system
IC must know:
Exact fire location and conditions
Floor and stairwell layout
Location of occupants and FFs
If system use will create a hazard to FFs
VERTICAL VENTILATION
Vertical ventilation is the preferred method.
Stack Effect
Heat moves from hot to cold
Smoke and heat will rise to upper floors
Movement of smoke and heat will slow as the
loose temperature or interior temps increase.
VERTICAL VENTILATION
How do you get to the top?
Exterior means preferred
Elevator as far as possible, then walk up
VERTICAL VENTILATION
Check effect on fire with roof door and fire
floor door open.
Positive, remove roof door
Negative, try another roof door
VERTICAL VENTILATION
Avoid using elevator shafts to ventilate
VERTICAL VENTILATION
Be aware of Reverse stack effect
High exterior temperatures
Heat accumulation on upper floors
Cold smoke
Stratification
Smoke cools as it rises and hangs at various
levels
HORIZONTAL VENTILATION
Complex issue
May lead to intensification of fire
Falling glass > injuries and cut lines
HORIZONTAL VENTILATION
Determine Windward and Leeward side
BELOW the fire floor.
Small experiment to determine air movement