For our first webinar of 2025, we were pleased to welcome Paul Saunders, Passive Fire Technical Consultant at Fire Protection Association, to break down some of the most significant updates in fire safety standards and regulations.
Paul’s presentation covered key legislative updates, including the Building Control and Fire Safety Order, as well as the proposed changes to Approved Document B Volumes 1 & 2. While we addressed many important points during the live session, there wasn’t enough time to cover every question in detail.
To ensure you stay informed, we’ve gathered Paul’s responses to the most pressing queries from the event. Read on for expert insights into these critical fire safety developments.
Passive Fire Technical Consultant
Paul joined the FPA in 2024 with a wealth of experience in the research, design, and development of aerospace primary structures and dynamic components, the development of programmes for engineers with the Engineering Council UK, auditing fire safety in all types of premises with a Fire and Rescue Service including enforcing and prosecuting non-compliances, and conducting Fire Risk Assessment programmes for industrial and commercial premises.
Paul is Convenor of the RISCAuthority Passive Working Group, conducting programmes of research, publishing technical and general advisory papers, and presenting these at technical and industry events. He holds a Diploma in Management Studies, a BSc (Hons) in Fire Engineering, and several technical and fire-related qualifications. Paul is also a Chartered Member of the CIPD, MIFireE, IEng, AMRAeS, and AMEI.
Building owners and developers have advance notice of changes due to be introduced over the next few years; this year, 2026 and 2029. Other changes may be also be published as the Building Safety Regulator [BSR] (for England) has stated the intention to keep regulations under review. Fundamental Review of Building Regulations Guidance.
Other regions of the UK may also make changes of their own.
The 2026 regulations allow for any new development to be submitted following the guidance in force at the time and “sufficiently progressed” within 18 months but it would seem sensible to accommodate known changes if it was reasonable to do so. I am not legally qualified but if a developer chose to rely on a ‘not reasonably practicable’ defence in submitting designs that were likely to be non-compliant in the near future they may notice support is hard to find.
In addition to a second staircase the 2026 changes require an evacuation lift. Meeting this requirement is likely to be the greater challenge.
On a personal note, I would not be surprised if the BSR came to a view that 18m was an arbitrary determinant of ‘higher risk’ and some other condition would be more appropriate.
I am not clear of the meaning of ‘internal door’ in this context. If it refers to an accommodation door within a flat/maisonette then there are no applicable regulations unless the door is required to assure a safe escape. A final exit door with access onto a shared means of escape is covered in the regulations and always has been.
Yes.
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I cannot see that the requirement will be retrospective but if it is at all possible the costs of retro-fitting fire suppression would not usually be prohibitive.
“The changes highlighted in this amendment booklet take effect on 2 March 2025 for use in England.
The 2019 edition incorporating the 2020 and 2022 amendments will continue to apply where a building notice or an initial notice has been given to, or a building control approval application with full plans made to, the relevant authority before 2 March 2025 and either the building work to which it relates:
a. has started and is sufficiently progressed before that day; orThe answer to Q1 refers.
ADB requirements (whatever the version in force at the time) become necessary for ‘new build’ and any alterations work with a fire safety dimension. Existing buildings do not usually have to comply with Building Regulations but they may have to comply with the Fire Safety Order if the Fire Risk Assessment suggests the risk needs remedial action.
So the requirement for additional stairs (and an evacuation lift) applies to new and alteration developments.
It is still a proposal in the sense of not being enforceable until the published requirement date.
This is a commercial decision for the developers. It has already been seen in a number of developments stopping at five floors.
Case law is created from judgements of prosecutions brought by enforcing authorities. Any lack will be due to there being no non-compliances that are prosecutable or no appetite to prosecute by the enforcing authority.
It has always been the case that flat dwellings have been considered to be as safe as any other ground floor residence; occupants could evacuate to a place of safety relatively easily.
The difference in flats is there is a place of relative safety (the corridor and stairs and any common rooms) that the landlord or managing agent has responsibility for and where they must make such arrangements as necessary to ensure a safe evacuation.
So the choice of them must be to either make the flat a safe place or make provision for a safe escape, or both.
The Fire and Rescue Services Act requires that Fire and Rescue Services [FRS] must: [7 Fire-fighting (1) A fire and rescue authority] must make provision for the purpose of—
(a) extinguishing fires in its area, and
(b) protecting life and property in the event of fires in its area.”
Therefore firefighters will do everything they can to rescue people in need, whether they are in a house or a flat.
The difference is that the Fire Safety Order allows for the enforcement of safety provisions in flats that do not apply to houses, such as Article 14(2) “(b)in the event of danger, it must be possible for persons to evacuate the premises as quickly and as safely as possible;”
And Article 15(1) “The responsible person must—
(a) establish and, where necessary, give effect to appropriate procedures, including safety drills, to be followed in the event of serious and imminent danger to relevant persons;
(b) nominate a sufficient number of competent persons to implement those procedures in so far as they relate to the evacuation of relevant persons from the premises;”
So the landlord or agent or other person identified as the Responsible Person must be able to show that all Relevant Persons can escape safely in an emergency.
Sprinklers are specified as the form of fire suppression that has defined and reliable performance behaviour. Other forms of fire suppression are available but there is not yet sufficient understanding of their performance to be quoted in guidance.
National classes for fire resistance are usually refences to the British Standard BS 476 which has been found to be insufficient on its own to provide assurance of protection. The tests under the more comprehensive suite of BS EN 13501 are more dependable.
Reaction to fire relates to the degree to which a product will contribute, by its own decomposition, to a fire under specified conditions.
This is typically demonstrated through BS EN 13501-1.
Fire resistance is a measure of one or more of the following criteria.
Resistance to collapse (loadbearing capacity), which applies to loadbearing elements only, denoted ‘R’ in the European classification of the resistance to fire performance.
Resistance to fire penetration (integrity), denoted ‘E’ in the European classification of the resistance to fire performance.
Resistance to the transfer of excessive heat (insulation), denoted ‘I’ in the European classification of the resistance to fire performance.
This is typically demonstrated through BS EN 13501-2, 3 or 4.
References to relevant parts of British Standard BS 476 will have no future validity.
In the first (and last) instance the Responsible Person [RP] is responsible. If an enforcing authority becomes aware of the issue, they have a duty to enforce the applicable regulations and will address these to the RP. If the RP can show that some other person was at fault that person can also be pursued.
The HTM Fire Codes are entirely separate guidance which may be amended but as they are typically of a higher standard in the first place there may be no need.
It is never a good idea to have any high fire risk in a means of escape. Different enforcing authorities are entitled to take contrary views on proposals, but the Fire Safety Order will have the final say on the safety of premises where they have jurisdiction.
The latest version of BS 9991 has just been published. Its scope includes
a. dwellings (single-family houses, self-contained flats or maisonettes);I expect so.
The guidance for schools in England is in BB100 (https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/building-bulletin-100-design-for-fire-safety-in-schools) last issued in March 2014.
As for Q4, I cannot see that the requirement will be retrospective but if it is at all possible the costs of retro-fitting fire suppression would not usually be prohibitive.
“The changes highlighted in this amendment booklet take effect on 2 March 2025 for use in England.
The 2019 edition incorporating the 2020 and 2022 amendments will continue to apply where a building
notice or an initial notice has been given to, or a building control approval application with full plans made to, the relevant authority before 2 March 2025 and either the building work to which it relates:
c. has started and is sufficiently progressed before that day; oris started and is sufficiently progressed within the period of six months beginning on that day.”
I do not expect so but if it is at all possible the costs of retro-fitting fire suppression would not usually be prohibitive.
Yes. Both modular construction and the use of novel materials such as CLT are likely to challenge the extent to which BS9991 can be applied.
The recent clarification of the Fire Safety Order brings this firmly into its scope. The RP or the person ‘in control’ of the non-complying matter will be subject to enforcement by the Fire and Rescue Authority if it cannot be resolved by other means.
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We’d like to extend our sincere thanks to each of our key speakers for their insights during the webinar, and a special thank you to Paul for taking the time to respond to all the unanswered questions.
Be sure to sign up for updates on our upcoming webinars here, and if you have any questions about the topics covered in this Q&A, feel free to reach out below. One of our fire safety consultants will be happy to assist you.