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Grenfell Fire Door Failure - An Expert's View

Published: 19/03/2018

A complete fire doorset recovered from the lower floors at Grenfell Tower have been tested - and have failed. They were supposed to be 30 minute fire rated but only lasted 15.


It has not been revealed where the doors were tested but it is most likely at the BRE establishment that undertook cladding tests after the inferno killed 71 people.


Fire doors are one of the most basic passive fire protection systems installed in both domestic and commercial buildings but their effectiveness can be compromised by a variety of factors - not least their installation and a basic lack of maintenance.


The supplier to Grenfell is believed to be Manse Masterdor who will have almost certainly supplied finished product to an installer knowing that it would be illegal for the installer to modify the product (with hardware or glass for example) as that runs the risk of degradation. However, many fire door inspections reveal that the intumescents which are fundamental to a fire door's effectiveness have either not been fitted properly (or at all) or have degraded over time.


Masterdor offers a glass reinforced plastic fire door sets (tested to either a 30 or 60 minute fire rating) in both 25mm standard and a narrow profile 15mm wheelchair Part M compliant threshold - the frame option will have an impact on fire resistance.


 

An expert's view


Simon Beer from Bluesky Certification which undertakes fire testing on doors, windows and other products in association with Cambridge Fire & Research told ThisWeekinFM: "I had expected something like the issue that has been highlighted with the fire doors to emerge from the enquiry into the Grenfell Tower fire.


"it is critical that fire doorsets are manufactured, installed and maintained correctly in order to maintain the fire resistance."


Only this week TWinFM attended a fire door test simulation as Simon Beer's guest. He continued after the event and after the latest Grenfell revelation: "The fire test demonstration that was part of our training course proved that a small variation of the specification can be detrimental to the performance.


"I have expressed the opinion that the fire at Grenfell Tower is likely to have spread on the inside of the building as well as the outside, due to issues with fire compartmentation. This opinion is based on issues that I regularly see on site with respect to fire stopping, compartment walls and fire doors. Problems with manufacturing, installation and ongoing maintenance can all have a significantly detrimental effect on the performance and the fire compartmentation will only be as good as the weakest point."


 

30?


Beer continued: "With regards to the fire doors that were removed from Grenfell Tower and then tested, I don’t know where they were tested or to what standard, how they were installed for the test or whether there was damage caused by installation, maintenance or ongoing use whilst they were installed at Grenfell Tower. However on the face of it an FD30 fire door that only achieves 15 minutes is likely to have a serious issue with the specification."


The test observed by ThisWeekinFM featured a deliberately low specification fire doorset with deliberate flaws incorporated - and it still managed to last a full 30 minutes (apart from at one section of glazing which is where the deliberate fault was included).


 

Ministerial reassurance


Housing Minister Sajid Javid told Parliament (on March 15) that the fire door testing results were not 'systemic'...that fire doors that would fail the 30 minute resistance test had not been installed all over the UK and thus the risk to public safety remained low.


Javid said: "An investigation has involved a thorough examination of every aspect of the Tower, including front doors to flats within the property. These doors include a glazed fire door manufactured around 5 years ago.


"Initial inspections indicate the door is believed to have been designed to resist fire for up to 30 minutes. But, when tested by the Metropolitan Police, it failed after approximately 15 minutes. The Metropolitan Police considered that this test result might have wider implications for public safety and alerted my department."


 

No risk


Javid continued: "The government immediately sought advice from the Independent Expert Panel to test the findings to see whether any action was required as a result. The panel consulted with representatives from the Metropolitan Police, the government’s Chief Scientific Advisers and the National Fire Chief’s Council.


"Following this, the Expert Panel has advised that the risks to public safety remain low."


Further tests will continue.


 
 

Reassurance?


In what might be seen as undermining his own reassurance, the Housing Minister also offered this statement: "There is no evidence that this is a systemic issue. Data between 2009 and 2017 shows that fire does not generally spread beyond the room of origin."


 

Opposition view


Tony Lloyd, Shadow Housing Minister, said: “If this isn’t systemic, what assessment has been made of how many buildings are potentially affected by this? How many individual flats? How many people who have fire doors that simply don’t do the job?”


 

Hackitt


Dame Judith Hackitt is undertaking an independent review of Building Regulations and Fire Safety. She has been made aware of these latest findings.


 

Beer - mandatory accreditation should be instigated


Simon Beer added: "The Building Regulations currently have a recommendation for UKAS accredited 3rd party certification to cover the manufacture and installation of fire doors. I understand that the cost to the industry is the reason that this was recommended rather than mandated. I believe a good first step to improving standards would be to make this mandatory with immediate effect."


Picture: A fire door test at Cambridgeshire Fire Research on behalf of Bluesky Certification showed that even aa flawed fire doorset should resist for over 30 minutes


Article written by Brian Shillibeer

Grenfell Fire Door Failure - An Expert's View
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