Fire precaution facilities and equipment must be provided of such type, number and location as considered necessary to ensure the safety of the occupants and visitors to the property.
The recognised national guidance for fire safety in residential accommodation (including HMOs) is published by LACORS, Housing - Fire Safety, Guidance on Fire Safety provisions for certain types of existing housing, July 2008.
This document contains advice for landlords and managers to ensure that adequate fire precaution facilities and equipment are provided.
The document is based on fire risk assessment principles and provides recommendations, guidance and specific recommended equipment levels for different HMO and property types.
The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 places a legal duty on the Responsible Person for an HMO to carry out a ‘suitable and sufficient’ Fire Risk Assessment and to document the ‘significant findings’ of that assessment.
This piece of legislation is ‘enforced’ by the Fire Authority and further information can be found here
Should the property meet the definition of a licensable HMO, the Responsible Person will be expected to forward a copy of their written Fire Risk Assessment and ‘significant findings’ to Dorset Council, Housing Standards Team and Dorset and Wiltshire Fire and Rescue Service on request.
There is a legal duty that all fire precaution equipment such as fire doors, fire extinguishers and fire alarms are tested and maintained in good order.
The appropriate level and scope of fire precaution facilities to be provided will vary from property to property.
Exact requirements will often be determined by a property inspection and in consultation with Dorset and Wiltshire Fire and Rescue Service.
The following table provides a guide to what may be considered appropriate in certain property types.
3.1 Expected Grades and Coverage of automated fire detection & warning systems for some common property types.
The following is based on all properties being of sound traditional construction.
Property description
Shared house HMO of up to two storeys (shared cooking facilities)
Details
- solid, well-fitting doors to all rooms
- Grade D LD3 coverage + additional detection to the kitchen (heat), lounge and any cellar containing a risk (interlinked)
- fire blankets in kitchens
Property description
Shared house HMO of three or four storeys (shared cooking facilities)
Details
- 30 minute protected route
- FD30 self-closing doors to all risk rooms with intumescent seals only (no smoke seals fitted)
- 30 minute fire resistance to cellars
- Grade D LD3 coverage + additional detection to the kitchen (heat), lounge and any cellar containing a risk (interlinked)
- fire blanket in kitchens
- emergency lighting if route is long and/or complex
Property description
Shared house HMO of five or six storeys (shared cooking facilities)
Details
- 30 minute protected route
- FD30S self-closing doors with smoke and intumescent seals to all risk rooms
- lobby protection to all floors (if 5 storeys)
- secondary means of escape (if 6 storeys)
- Grade A LD2 coverage + additional detection to the kitchen (heat), lounge and any cellar containing a risk (interlinked)
- fire blankets in kitchens
Property description
Bedsit type HMO (no more than 2 storeys) (shared cooking facilities)
Details
- Grade D LD2 coverage interlinked heat alarms with battery backup located in each communal kitchen
- interlinked smoke alarm in cellar
- interlinked smoke alarms with battery backup located in each bedsit
- fire signage along fire route if it is complex
- emergency lighting if there is little borrowed light or complex escape route
- fire blankets in kitchens
Property description
Bedsit HMO of one or two storeys with individual cooking facilities within bedsits
Details
- Grade D: LD2 coverage in the common areas and heat detectors in kitchens (interlinked)
- Grade D smoke alarm in each bedsit to protect the sleeping occupants of that bedsit (non-interlinked)
- fire signage along fire route if it is complex
- emergency lighting if there is little borrowed light or complex escape route
- fire blankets in kitchens 30 minute protected route
- FD30S self-closing doors with smoke and intumescent seals to all risk rooms
Property description
Bedsit HMO of three to six storeys with individual cooking facilities within bedsits
Details
- Grade A: LD2 coverage in the common areas and heat detectors in bedsits (interlinked)
- Grade D smoke alarm in each bedsit to protect the sleeping occupants of that bedsit (non-interlinked)
- fire blankets in kitchens
- 30 minute protected route
- FD30s self-closing doors with smoke and intumescent seals to all risk rooms
Property description
Three- to six-storey house converted to self-contained flats (prior to Building Regulations 1991, approved document B standard)
Details
- Grade A: LD2 coverage in the common areas and a heat detector in each flat in the room/lobby opening onto the escape route (interlinked)
- Grade D: LD3 coverage in each flat (non-interlinked) smoke alarm in the room/lobby opening onto the escape route to protect the sleeping occupants of that flat
- Fire blankets in kitchens
- 30 minute protected route
- FD30S self-closing doors with smoke and intumescent seals to flat entrance doors that open onto common areas
Property description
Two-storey house converted to self-contained flats (prior to Building Regulations 1991, approved document B standard)
Details
- Grade D: LD2 coverage in the common areas and a heat detector in each flat in the room/lobby opening onto the escape route (interlinked)
- Grade D: LD3 coverage in each flat (non-interlinked) smoke alarm in the room/lobby opening onto the escape route) to protect the sleeping occupants
- fire blankets in kitchens
- 30 minute protected route
- FD30S self-closing doors with smoke and intumescent seals to flat entrance doors onto common areas
Property description
Building converted partly into self-contained flats and partly into bedsits or non-self-contained lets
Details
A mixed system: Apply the appropriate recommendation for each unit of accommodation from this table and the appropriate whole-house system based on the storey height.
Property description
Flat in multiple occupation (FMO) (any storey height and regardless of date of construction/ conversion)
Details
- Grade D: LD3 coverage + additional heat detector in the kitchen (and shared living room depending on risk)
- fire blankets in kitchens
In using the above the following definitions have been used.
Shared house
HMOs where the whole property has been rented out by an identifiable group of sharers such as students, work colleagues or friends as joint tenants.
Each occupant normally has their own bedroom, but they share the kitchen, dining facilities, bathroom, WC, living room and all other parts of the house.
All the tenants will have exclusive legal possession and control of all parts of the house, including all the bedrooms.
There is normally a significant degree of social interaction between the occupants, and they will, in the main, have rented out the house as one group.
There is a single joint tenancy agreement.
In summary, the group will possess many of the characteristics of a single family household, although the property is still technically an HMO as the occupants are not all related.
Bedsit
HMOs which have been converted into several separate non-self-contained bedsit lettings or floor-by-floor lets.
Typically, there will be individual cooking facilities within each bedsit, but alternatively there may be shared cooking facilities or a mixture of the two.
Toilets and bathing/washing facilities will mostly be shared.
There is unlikely to be a communal living or dining room.
Each bedsit or letting will be let to separate individuals who will live independently, with little or no communal living between tenants.
Each letting will have its own individual tenancy agreement and there will usually be a lock on each individual letting door
3.2 Types of fire alarm system
Grade A
A fire detection and alarm system that is designed and installed in accordance with the recommendations of BS 5839: part 1 (2002), except clauses relating to alarm audibility, alarm warnings for the hearing-impaired, standby supplies, manual call points and radio-linked systems, which are replaced by part 6.
This comprises a system of electrically operated smoke and/or heat detectors which are linked to a control panel.
The control panel must conform to current BS 5839: part 4 (or equivalent). In general, the system must incorporate manual call points which should be located next to final exits, and, in larger multi-storey properties, on each landing.
The alarm signal must achieve sound levels of not less than 65dB (A) in all accessible parts of the building and not less than 75dB (A) at all bed-heads when all doors are shut, to arouse sleeping persons.
Grade D
A system of one or more mains-powered smoke (or heat) alarms each with integral battery standby supply.
These are designed to operate in the event of mains failure and therefore could be connected to the local lighting circuit rather than an independent circuit at the dwelling’s main distribution board.
There is no control panel.
3.3 Levels of fire alarm coverage
LD2 coverage
A system incorporating detectors in all circulation spaces that form part of the escape routes from the dwelling and in all rooms or areas that present a high fire risk to occupants i.e. risk rooms.
LD3 coverage
A system incorporating detectors in circulation spaces that form part of the escape routes from the dwelling only.