Protecting against fire in buildings under construction or demolition presents unique challenges. Often, the structure is lacking power for fire detection and alarm systems, lacks heat for keeping fire sprinkler systems from freezing, and usually does not have a satisfactory water source for fire extinguishment. Working trades may be cutting or welding, providing ignition sources for accumulated building materials or waste. The fire department becomes the primary fire protection means, and to assist their efforts, a dry standpipe is installed.
A dry standpipe is a network of in-place piping allowing connection of a water supply (usually a fire department mobile apparatus such as an engine or a pumper) to a dedicated inlet at street level, with hose outlet valves on each floor. Firefighters do not need to drag long hose lengths up stairwells – they simply carry hose to any floor, attach to the hose valve, and proceed to attack the fire.
Firefighters need a reliable water supply for interior attack. Without robust hose streams, firefighters are at serious risk inside a burning structure. In most completed and occupied structures, a wet standpipe is present, always filled with water, and supported by connection to mains and building fire pumps.
Interfering with the integrity of the pipe (by damaging or actually removing a section), or tampering with hose valves, will impair the proper use of the standpipe. With wet standpipes, impairment is immediately obvious – there is an immediate and obvious water discharge. However, there is no water in a dry standpipe. Impairment is likely to be overlooked until firefighters fail to receive water as expected – and now their risk is greatly increased. Firefighters have been killed in incidents directly related to dry standpipe impairment. A way to know that impairment has occurred is vital to primary fire protection in buildings relying on dry standpipes.
Avoiding all accidental or deliberate dry standpipe impairments is not possible, But, installation of a method to supervise the status of the dry standpipe, and signal the occurrence, allows site safety personnel to act – closing down dangerous operations, moving workers to other areas, and initiating immediate repairs.
Yes. Filling dry standpipes with pressurized air – instead of pressurized water – and then automatically monitoring the air pressure can accomplish the objective. When pipe is damaged, or when a hose valve is accidentally or deliberately opened, a signal will warn site safety personnel and action can be taken.
While you could try to put together an assortment of untested and untried components, there is a better way. UNITED Fire Systems has developed STANDPIPE-PAC™, a system specifically engineered to provide all requirements and is easy to specify, install and maintain.
STANDPIPE-PAC™ consists of expertly chosen and assembled components, including:
UNITED Fire Systems wants to help you with what you need – whether it’s complying with your local law, writing a specification, understanding what to consider when preparing an effective law, or providing the best choice when you decide for yourself to install this vital protection.
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