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kellyfirth78  
#1 Posted : 03 June 2019 13:47:38(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
kellyfirth78

I am fairly new to H&S (Nebosh Cert) and am currently working for a company who have a new construction project coming up, which is the internal fit out of a steel framed warehouse unit (2 mezannines, offices, wahrooms, meeting rooms, plant rooms & M&E). The warehouse is 3000sq mtr plus a new additional extension to the side.  The project is being completed by sub contractors who are experts in their fields. Can you tell me what the legal requirement is for fire alarms and extinuishers during the construction phase of the project? I forsee all hot works being covered by permit system and contractors will bring their own extinuishers for hot works. I understand that the answer will depend on the fire risk assessment, which will be completed by a 3rd party company, however I'd like to understand what the minimum requirements as an indication. 

Mark-W  
#2 Posted : 03 June 2019 13:51:43(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Mark-W

I understand your need to know what is the legal minimum but in my mind if you deviate from an external FRA and the worst happens you'd have a terrible job in court trying to justify your actions.

You've paid for an external FRA because you have no one qualified internally but then want to know the legal minimum, which says thats what you want to provide or being directed to provide by the powers that be.

I'd get the FRA completed and go with the recomendations laid down for you.

thanks 1 user thanked Mark-W for this useful post.
kellyfirth78 on 03/06/2019(UTC)
kellyfirth78  
#3 Posted : 03 June 2019 13:55:05(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
kellyfirth78

Of course, I would not even think of atempting to do this myself, I am simply trying to find out the requirements so i can improve my understanding. I am booking myself onto the nebosh fire certificate so I can fill some gaps! 

thanks 1 user thanked kellyfirth78 for this useful post.
Mark-W on 03/06/2019(UTC)
Mark-W  
#4 Posted : 03 June 2019 14:07:47(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Mark-W

When I was conducting an FRA a while back, I had a mate who was the fire brigade liaison for businesses in our area. He told me to read BS9999. It has everything you will need to know. Quite a dry read but worthwhile. It now sits on my desktop for future reference if I ever need it

thanks 1 user thanked Mark-W for this useful post.
kellyfirth78 on 03/06/2019(UTC)
deane5678  
#5 Posted : 07 June 2019 15:28:23(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
deane5678

The appropriate guidance for this is HSG168 which is what I would expect the fire risk assessor to be considering when carrying out their assessment. Obviously, I'm not suggesting you carry out the assessments yourself, but from a learning / curiosity perspective you should find it useful. 

Also worth noting that for a general approach to fire safety you should use the Government assessment guides, not BS9999.

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