NFPA Journal - March/April 2013 - (Page 32)
>>in compliance
chip carson, p.e.
NFPA CODE REQUIREMENTS
Finish Issues
l
ike everyone in the fire and
life safety communities, I was
shocked by the recent news of
the Kiss nightclub fire in Brazil that
killed more than 230 people. The fire
occurred just days before the 10th
anniversary of The Station nightclub
fire in West Warwick, Rhode Island,
that killed 100 people. The similarities
between the two events are sobering,
including the issue of certain interior
finishes. As was the case in The StaTHE LIFE SAFETY CODE
addresses interior finish
materials that have
historically created some
nasty fire scenarios.
tion fire, combustible insulating foam
appears to have been a major factor
in how the Kiss fire began and spread.
These are the kinds of materials
that NFPA 101®, Life Safety Code®,
refers to as “specific materials” in
subsection 10.2.4, which addresses
several materials that have historically created some nasty fires,
starting with textile wall and ceiling
materials, including carpeting, in
paragraph 10.2.4.1.
We know that textiles placed on
walls and ceilings can burn very
quickly. NFPA 101 includes several
types of textile installations with differing requirements. For example,
new textile materials on walls or
ceilings must have a flame spread
index of 25 or less and be installed
in a room protected by sprinklers.
If the textile only extends threequarters of the way from the floor
to the ceiling but is not more than
8 feet (2.4 meters) high, the material
32
NFPA JOURNAL MARCH/APRIL 2013
must have a flame spread index of 25
or less if sprinklers are not installed
in the building.
Paragraph 10.2.4.2 addresses
expanded vinyl wall and ceiling
materials. Many vinyl wall coverings
are thin and present little problem
from a fire development standpoint,
since thin materials tend to take on
the burning characteristics of the
material to which they are applied.
Expanded materials, on the other
hand, are often “puffy” and thicker
than the more common vinyl wall
coverings. The code is stringent in its
requirements, which are very similar
to the requirements for textile materials applied to walls and ceilings.
The code also addresses cellular or
foamed plastic, the material involved
in The Station fire. The code prohibits the use of cellular or foamed
plastic unless it has been subjected
to large-scale testing to document its
combustibility. The code provides
examples of acceptable tests, such
as NFPA 286, Standard Methods of Fire
Tests for Evaluating Contribution of Wall
and Ceiling Interior Finish to Room Fire
Growth. Cellular or foamed plastics
can be used for trim as long as it
covers no more than 10 percent of
the walls or ceiling, provided “that
it is not less than 20 pounds/cubic
foot (320 kilograms/cubic meter)
in density, is limited to a half inch
(13 millimeters) in thickness and 4
inches (100 millimeters) in width, and
complies with the requirements for
Class A or Class B interior wall and
ceiling finish as described in 10.2.3.4;
however, the smoke developed index
shall not be limited.”
A new addition to subsection
10.2.4 covering polypropylene and
high-density polypropylene prohibits the use of polypropylene as
an interior finish material unless
it complies with the requirements
of 10.2.3.7.2, which call for testing in accordance with NFPA 286
with specific performance criteria noted. Also new to the 2012
edition of the Life Safety Code are
requirements in subsection 10.3.8
for lockers. This subsection states
that lockers of combustible material other than wood are to be
considered interior finish.
The requirements for interior finish materials are in the Life Safety
Code for good reason. Past experience has proven that materials
applied to the walls and ceilings of
spaces can have a significant effect
on fire development.
CHIP CARSON, P.E., is president
of Carson Associates, Inc., a fire
engineering and code consultancy.
Illustration: Dave Ember
A nightclub fire raises the question, again, of hazardous interior finish materials
Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of NFPA Journal - March/April 2013
NFPA Journal - March/April 2013
Contents
First Word
In a Flash
Perspectives
Firewatch
Research
Heads Up
Structural Ops
In Compliance
Buzzwords
Outreach
Electrical Safety
Wildfire Watch
Cover Story: Storage Occupancies
Fifty Years of Smoke Detection
Industrial Occupancies
Chicago 2013
Fire Analysis + Research
Section Spotlight
What’s Hot
Looking Back
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