FireDOC Search

Author
Hall, J. R., Jr.
Title
U.S. Experience With Sprinklers and Other Automatic Fire Extinguishing Equipment.
Coporate
National Fire Protection Association, Quincy, MA
Report
USS14, January 2009, 86 p.
Keywords
sprinklers | fire extinguishing agents | fire statistics | fire suppression | fire protection | fire fatalities | wet sprinkler systems | death | structures | failure | extinguishing | effectiveness
Identifiers
automatic extinguishing equipment type; automatic extinguishing equipment operational reliability; automatic extinguishing equipment effectiveness; National Fire Incident Reporting System (NFIRS); fact sheet
Abstract
Automatic sprinklers are highly effective elements of total system designs for fire protection in buildings. When sprinklers cover the area of fire origin, they operate in 95% of all reported structure fires large enough to activate sprinklers. When they operate, they are effective 96% of the time, resulting in a combined performance of operating effectively in 91% of reported fires where sprinklers were present in the fire area and fire was large enough to activate sprinklers. When wet-pipe sprinklers are present in structures that are not under construction and excluding cases of failure or ineffectiveness because of a lack of sprinklers in the fire area, the fire death rate per 1,000 reported structure fires is lower by 80% for home fires, where most structure fire deaths occur, and the rate of property damage per reported structure fire is lower by 45-70% for most property uses. Also, when sprinklers are present in structures that are not under construction and excluding cases of failure or ineffectiveness because of a lack of sprinklers in the fire area, 94% of reported structure fires have flame damage confined to the room of origin compared to 74% when no automatic extinguishing equipment is present. When sprinklers fail to operate, the reason most often given (63% of failures) is shutoff of the system before fire began. (All statistics are based on 2003-2006 fires reported to U.S. fire departments, excluding buildings under construction.)