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Fire chiefs call for more than one fire escape staircase in tall buildings
CM Staff
(Image: Maxim Tajer, Unsplash)
The National Fire Chiefs Council (NFCC) is urging the government to require all new residential buildings over 18m, or seven storeys high, to have more than one fire escape staircase.
In England, there is currently no maximum height for residential buildings with only one staircase.
The NFCC called on the government to make a series of changes for buildings over 18m or seven storeys, including:
All new buildings to have more than one protected staircase.
All existing buildings retrofitted with sprinklers.
Lifts in existing buildings installed or replaced for use in an evacuation.
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The NFCC said its recommendations could be reinforced by amending Building Regulations or Approved Document B.
Evacuations from tall buildings
While it is often safe for residents of tall buildings to “stay put” in the event of a fire, the London Fire Brigade reported 154 cases between 1 April 2019 and 31 March 2022 of 10 or more people evacuated from a block of flats of at least six storeys. The NFCC said this meant 8,500 residents chose to evacuate rather than stay put either before, during, or after the fire and rescue services arrived.
Gavin Tomlinson, NFCC protection and business safety scrutiny committee chair said: “We are calling on the government to ensure that all new high-rise residential buildings over 18 metres, or seven storeys, have more than one fire escape staircase. In the event of a fire, a correctly designed second staircase removes the risk of a single point of failure, buying critical time for firefighting activities, and providing residents with multiple escape routes.”
NFCC chair Mark Hardingham added: “The government should be commended on the improvements it has made, such as banning combustible cladding and requiring sprinklers at 11 metres. However, we urge the government to now publish an updated workplan for the review of Approved Document B to give regulators, the public, and the wider fire safety industry confidence that the Government is still committed to reform.”
The November/December 2025 issue of Construction Management magazine is now available to read in digital format.
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