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Volume 7, Issue 2, May 2008

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Automatic Fire Sprinklers: The Facts

NOTICE: From time to time "do-it-yourself" articles or kits appear that encourage consumers to install their own automatic fire sprinkler systems. The American Fire Sprinkler Association STRONGLY DISCOURAGES the installation of fire sprinkler systems by people who have not been trained in the proper installation of fire sprinklers. Fire sprinklers should always be installed in accordance with standards of the National Fire Protection Association using approved and/or listed materials. Fire sprinklers protect lives and property. To ensure proper design and operation, always seek out a trained and competent contractor.

Automatic Fire Sprinklers: The Facts

Automatic fire sprinklers have been in use in the U.S. since 1874.

Fire sprinklers are widely recognized as the single most effective method for fighting the spread of fires in their early stages - before they can cause severe injury to people and damage to property.

When one fire sprinkler head goes off to fight a fire the entire sprinkler system does NOT activate. Sprinklers react to temperatures in individual rooms.

The chances of a fire sprinkler accidentally going off are extremely remote.

Installation of fire sprinklers can provide discounts on insurance premiums.

The costs for installing fire sprinkler systems in buildings 6 to 8 stories high ranges from under a dollar to about $2.00 per square foot in most new construction and from about $1.50 to $2.50 per square foot for retrofitting sprinklers in existing buildings.

The installation of fire sprinklers in new residential construction is estimated to make up around 1% of the total building cost. (Similar to the cost of new carpet)

Over 200 U.S. communities have residential sprinkler laws. Roughly 100 of these communities are in California. In downtown Fresno for example, there has been fire damage of only $42,000 during a 10-year period in which its sprinklering law has been in effect.

According to the National Fire Protection Association, property damage in hotel fires was 78% less in structures with sprinklers than it was in structures without sprinklers during the years 1983-87. (Average loss per fire was $2,300 in sprinklered buildings and $10,300 in unsprinklered buildings).

Nearly half of all hotels and motels, according to a 1988 survey by NFPA, have sprinkler systems.

NFPA has no record of a fire killing more than two people in a completely sprinklered building where the system was properly operating, except in an explosion or flash fire or where industrial fire brigade members or employees were killed during fire suppression operations.

Conclusion

The National Fire Protection Association outlines several major strategies that are key to reductions in fire losses and especially in home fire deaths, which are 78.3% of the total fire deaths. They are:

More, and more widespread, public fire safety education on how to prevent fires and how to avoid serious injury or death if fire occurs.

Residential fire safety initiatives remain the key to reductions in the overall fire death toll.

Wider use and proper maintenance of smoke detectors, coupled with practiced home escape plans.

Wider use of residential sprinklers.

Additional efforts to make home products more fire-safe, such as less fire-prone cigarettes and child-resistant lighters.

Reprint from AmericanFire Sprinkler Association Website

Copyright ©2008 AmericanFire Sprinkler Association

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