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Issues Origin and Cause Fire Alarm System
Comments The fire started in a vacant
22nd floor office in a pile of linseed
oil-soaked rags left by a contractor.
The activation of a smoke detector on
the 22nd floor was the first notice of
a possible fire. Due to incomplete detector
coverage, the fire was already well advanced
before the detector was activated. Building
Staff Response Building employees did
not call the fire department when the
alarm was activated. An employee investigating
the alarm was trapped when the elevator
opened on the fire floor and was rescued
when personnel on the ground level activated
the manual recall. The Fire Department
was not called until the employee had
been rescued. Alarm Monitoring Service
The private service which monitors the
fire alarm system did not call the Fire
Department when the alarm was first activated.
A call was made to the building to verify
that they were aware of the alarm. The
building personnel were already checking
the alarm at that time. Electrical Systems
Installation of the primary and secondary
electrical power risers in a common unprotected
enclosure resulted in a complete power
failure when the fire-damaged conductors
shorted to ground. The natural gas powered
emergency generator also failed.
Fire Barriers Unprotected penetrations
in fire-resistance rated assemblies and
the absence of fire dampers in ventilation
shafts permitted fire and smoke to spread
vertically and horizontally. Ventilation
openings in the stairway enclosures permitted
smoke to migrate into the stairways, complicating
firefighting. Unprotected openings in
the enclosure walls of 22nd floor electrical
closet permitted the fire to impinge on
the primary and secondary electrical power
risers.
Standpipe System and Improperly installed
standpipe valves Pressure Reducing Valves
(PRVs) provided inadequate pressure for
fire department hose streams using 1 3/4-inch
hose and automatic fog nozzles. Pressure
reducing valves were installed to limit
standpipe outlet discharge pressures to
safe levels. The PRVs were set too low
to produce effective hose streams; tools
and expertise to adjust the valve settings
did not become available until too late.
Locked Stairway Doors For security reasons,
stairway doors were locked to prevent
reentry except on designated floors. (A
building code variance had been granted
to approve this arrangement.) This compelled
firefighters to use forcible entry tactics
to gain access from stairways to floor
areas
Exterior Fire Spread “Autoexposure”
Exterior vertical fire spread resulted
when exterior windows failed. This was
a primary means of fire spread.
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