Quote:
Originally Posted by Osem
It's a really difficult situation clearly. I'm pretty sure I heard a former fire brigade safety officer saying that the main problem in the communal areas isn't so much the fire as toxic smoke and sprinkler systems won't help with that. The link below would seem to confirm the problem. In this case toxic smoke/fumes and fire was entering the flats via the exterior of the building so again sprinklers wouldn't have been totally effective. How feasible would it be to retrofit sprinklers inside all the blocks I wonder? It does seem like a sprinkler system inside the flat in which the fire started could well have prevented this tragedy but even so there'd still be the potential for external fire sources to set the cladding ablaze.
|
It is the heat which makes smoke rise. If a sprinkler system is active it cools the smoke and it drops down to floor level. Science 101.