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High-Rise
Fire Safety
Every year there are that break out in high rise buildings causing deaths,
injuries and millions of dollars in fire damage. Most of these could be
eliminated if everyone practiced good fire prevention on the job and in
the home and planned ahead for a fire emergency.
In terms of fire safety, a high rise building could be defined as a building
taller than four stories or 75 feet since fire department aerial ladders
rarely reach anything higher than that. The possibility of a fire deserves
serious thought. In a high rise building, it's especially important to
know when and how to escape in case of fire.
Prevention
- Make sure there
is self-closure hardware on your entrance door to the office, apartment
or condominium. This is the single biggest reason for the smoke and
fire to get outside of the original occupancy thereby endangering other
occupants and firefighters. Be sure that stairwell doors are never locked.
- Smoke only where
it is permitted.
- Use large non-tip
ashtrays and empty them only when you are sure the ashes, matches and
butts are cold. Make sure that no one, including visitors, has left
cigarettes smoldering in wastebaskets or on furniture.
- Be alert around
electrical equipment. If electrical equipment is not working properly
or if it gives off an unusual odor - often the first sign of a problem
that could cause a fire - disconnect the equipment and call the appropriate
maintenance person.
- Promptly replace
any electrical cord that is cracked or has a broken connection.
- When using extension
cords, protect them from damage; do not put them across doorways or
any place where they will be stepped on or chafed. Check the amperage
load specified by the manufacturer or the "listing laboratory,"
and do not exceed it. Do not plug one extension cord into another and
do not plug more than one extension cord into one outlet.
- Keep all heat-producing
appliances away from the wall and away from anything that might burn.
Leave plenty of space for air to circulate around copy machines, word
processors and other equipment that normally gives off heat.
- Make sure all appliances
in your work area or residence - such as coffee makers and hot plates
- are turned off at the end of each use.
- Keep storage areas,
stairway landings and other out-of-the-way locations free of waste paper,
empty boxes, dirty rags and other material that could fuel a fire or
hamper an escape.
- Arson is the largest
single cause of fires in office buildings. Therefore, proper security
measures to keep unauthorized people out of the building will help prevent
both theft and fire.
In Case of Fire
If a fire does break out, sound the alarm and call the fire department.
Large fires start as small fires.
Learn the sound of your building's fire alarm. Encourage management to
schedule regular fire drills so that everyone will know how the alarm
sounds and how to escape.
Evacuation plans for your building should be posted where everyone can
see them. They should be discussed with new employees during orientation.
Learn the evacuation plans and participate in fire drills. In some buildings,
such as The Park and Garden House I or II the Fire Department has a "Stay
in Place" strategy. In other words, we do not evacuate most of the
building unless the smoke or fire starts to enter the other apartments.
The smoke will usually go to the floor of the fire, rise to the floor
above and then to the top floor of the building.
Know the location of the exits. Count the number of doors between your
office or unit and each of those exits - in case you must escape through
a darkened, smoke-filled corridor where you can't see very well.
Close the door to the room containing the fire and close all other doors
that you pass through during your escape, assuming you are the last person
out. Closing the doors helps to control the spread of fire.
If it becomes necessary to use an escape route where there is smoke, crawl
low under the smoke. Stay close to the floor where visibility is better,
the air is less toxic and it is cooler. Before you open a closed door,
feel it with the back of your hand. If it is hot, don't open it. Use your
alternate escape route. If it feels normal, open it carefully.
Be ready to slam it shut if heat or smoke starts to rush in. Once you
are outside the building, move well away from the building to a designated
meeting area where all members of your floor can be accounted for. If
anyone is missing, notify the fire department, DO NOT re-enter the building.
If it's not possible to escape from the floor you are on, don't panic.
Stay calm. Try to go to a room with an outside window and stay there.
Try to keep smoke out and be sure doors are closed. Stuff the cracks around
the door and vents using clothing, towels, paper or whatever is available.
If water is available, dampen a cloth and breathe through it to filter
out smoke and gases. If there is a working telephone, call the fire department
and tell them exactly where you are. This information will be relayed
immediately to the firefighters on the scene. Stay where you are and wave
something to attract their attention.
Each person with a disability should be assigned a co-worker (and an alternate)
to render assistance in case of an emergency. Participating in drills
is especially important for people with disabilities.
Never use an elevator during a fire emergency. Most modern elevators select
buttons are heat-activated, so they might go to the fire floor and stop
there with the doors open, exposing passengers to deadly heat and fumes.
Fire Extinguishers
Portable fire extinguishers are useful only if they are used properly,
if they are right for the type of fire and if the fire is discovered immediately.
If there is a portable fire extinguisher in or near by, take the time
to read the operating instructions and get training in how to use.
No one should attempt to fight even a small fire until people have been
evacuated from the area and the fire department has been called.
Never attempt to fight a fire if any of the following is true:
- Uncertainty about
how to use the extinguisher.
- The fire is spreading
beyond the immediate area where it started.
- The fire could
block the escape route.
Owners, Managers and Employers
If you own, manage or employ workers in a high- rise building, you should
have the answers to these questions:
- Do you have a fire
emergency plan?
- Has it been reviewed
and approved by the fire department?
- Have tenants and
employees been given full instructions on the details of the plan?
- Can the building
be evacuated to the street without interfering with fire department
personnel?
- If the answer to
question #4 is no, are there areas of refuge in the building?
- Is there provision
for physically challenged people who may be in the building?
- If a fire starts,
will it be detected promptly? How?
- Will the fire department
be notified promptly? How?
- Is there a provision
for heating, ventilation and air conditioning smoke control?
- Is there an emergency
communications system?
- Does the building
have area or floor fire wardens? Have they been trained?
- Are fire pumps,
emergency generators and lighting systems ready to use if needed?
- Are all exit doors
and exitways clear?
- Are emergency hand
lines and fire extinguishers in working order?
- Will security measures,
such as locking of doors, interfere with evacuation of occupants or
access of firefighters?
- Is the fire department
familiar with the building in all pertinent details?
- Has space been
designated for a fire department command center in the building?
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