Grenfell Tower Fire
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@antipodean said in Horrific Fire in London:
@NTA I know only too well how casual residents can be in apartment buildings. Every time I hear our alarm go off I wait to see if it will be turned off and only after a while do I go out into the foyer to see if there's smoke. But at least I know where the fire exits are and how quickly I could find them even if obscured.
We had a fire in a next door building to our office which resulted in the Fire Service being called and the fire alarm raised. Our office is in the ground floor and there are flats above. We evacuated the building but did not see any of the residents appearing. Two of us went back in the building (after assessing risk) to knock on doors and what have you so see one resident wandering around in his slippers trying to turn of the alarm because it was noisy.
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This is horrific. Here's the fire safety poster advising them to stay put
How the hell does this get ignored for so long? Seems almost too incredible to have this much notice of the problems as well as vivid descriptions of this catastrophe in advance.
Definitely a wake up call for all apartment dwellers. Our evacuation alarm went off the other day and a tenant just disabled it with a key that is left in the alarm lock, there is a load of flashing warning lights I assumed the bodycorp would have it fixed by now, bloody stupid even for me to have not chased it up by now.
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The more I'm reading, the more I'd like to see the building owner and whoever the overseers were spending tonight in a cell...
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=11876437
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wow, just wow, so horrific for all those involved.
How a block like that can go up like that and so quickly is just mid boggling in this day and age, surely points ot sub-standard materials and work and then poor systems.
And the reports of people jumping or dropping kids, is hard to even comprehend making that decision, roll the dice on surviving the fall or certain death by staying, just heartbreaking!
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@taniwharugby that is what is most shocking to me, how fast the whole building went up in flames. It's an old building but you'd hope with the renovations the materials used would be a consideration? I am really clueless when it comes to building standards but I assume both the building owners and the council will be held accountable for this.
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@No-Quarter said in Horrific Fire in London:
@taniwharugby that is what is most shocking to me, how fast the whole building went up in flames. It's an old building but you'd hope with the renovations the materials used would be a consideration? I am really clueless when it comes to building standards but I assume both the building owners and the council will be held accountable for this.
The managers are saying everything was signed off according to regs.
There is speculation that the type of cladding (something over polystyrene type base) shot the fire upwards but an architect was saying it was more likely that's were created that made a chimney type effect and sucked it. -
@Hooroo said in Horrific Fire in London:
Poor damn fire fighters! What an awful day at work for them. Must be one of the toughest jobs.
Yeah, they must have felt absolutely helpless. You could see them blasting their hoses as high as they could but it was completely ineffective in the face of that massive blaze. That'll haunt them for the rest of their lives
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Nightmarish stuff.
When I lived in Oslo I often visited a mate of mine who lived in a building like this. The fire alarm went off a couple of times and he didn't give a shit. We would have been truly Friar Tucked if there actually was a fire. I also worked in an older building which had to be evacuated at least once a month due to fire alarms. If it hadn't been for the safety reps nobody would have moved.
This incident shows you can never be too careful with fire safety.
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Our nightmare - 24th floor of a 48 floor high rise, although we have sprinklers,
fire stairs, and lots of concrete with (supposedly) hard to burn materials. This sounds like they fucked up the material they used in the refit, which appears to have made things worse - while people were told to stay inside. -
I think isn't that in the case if the building is supposedly constructed properly, and the fire will not spread, or should not spread as rapidly as that one did, therefore to avoid panic?
Sounds daft to me and goes against natural instinct to be told to stay inside your flat while your building is on fire, but I think there is supposed to be some reasoning behind it?
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@taniwharugby I genuinely can't think of one. Fire climbs, so it's best to get beneath it. Fire stairs are supposed to be fire-rated, whereas your apartment isn't.
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@antipodean just going by what I have read/been reported, as I said, not something I would think is the best idea...
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@antipodean said in Horrific Fire in London:
@taniwharugby I genuinely can't think of one. Fire climbs, so it's best to get beneath it. Fire stairs are supposed to be fire-rated, whereas your apartment isn't.
We have the same advice at my work - however this building is very modern and if fire is detected on a particular floor, then fire curtains immediately come down to contain it to one area. That floor is then evacuated first before evacuating the other floors.
In this case it appears on the face of it to be really, really bad advice - keeping your doors closed (as it states on their fire safety notice) is absurd and will never keep you safe from a fire.
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An old building (sometime in the mid 70's) but refurbed in 2015. It is owned by the local council, the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, but they outsource management to a private contractor, the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation. The cynic in me suggests that whoever wins the tender to oversee the council's properties is chosen mainly down to budget and it might be difficult to make ends meet on such tight margins. It reminds me of a quote from John Glen in relation tore-entering the Earth's atmosphere for the first time - something along the lines of "All I could think of was that each component of my spacecraft had been supplied by the cheapest contractor".