Written answers

Tuesday, 25 October 2016

Department of Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government

Fire Safety Regulations

Photo of Barry CowenBarry Cowen (Offaly, Fianna Fail)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

252. To ask the Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government the process by which housing units are classified as single dwellings or as multi-unit dwellings for the purposes of sections 18, 19 and 22 of the Fire Services Acts 1981 and 2003 from which dwellings occupied as a single dwelling are specifically excluded; and if local authorities have any enforcement and inspection powers under the Fire Services Act in respect of dwellings classified as single dwellings if there is a risk to public safety, such as a neighbouring building. [31717/16]

Photo of Simon CoveneySimon Coveney (Cork South Central, Fine Gael)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

Premises consisting of a dwelling house occupied as a single dwelling are exempted from the fire safety duties, and inspection and enforcement provisions, in Part III of the Fire Services Acts, 1981 and 2003. The Acts do not define a single dwelling and, while single dwellings are self-evident in most cases, consideration of a range of factors may be required on a case by case basis and may ultimately require interpretation by the Courts.

A single dwelling is generally either a dwelling house, a flat (separate and self-contained premises constructed or adapted for residential use and forming part of a building from some other part of which it is divided horizontally) or a maisonette (a dwelling forming part of a larger building, which has its rooms divided between two or more levels which are more than half a storey height apart).

Notwithstanding the exclusion of single dwellings from the provision of the Fire Services Act, very considerable progress has been made on enhancing the safety of occupants of dwellings through community fire safety programmes and fire safety promotion over the years. This has focussed on the domestic smoke alarm campaign and, while each fire death is one too many, the fire death rate per million has been halved over the past decade.

The construction standards for dwellings are covered by regulation. Part B (Fire safety) of the Building Regulations sets down the statutory minimum standards of fire safety provision which must be achieved when a new building, including a dwelling, is designed and constructed or when an existing building is subject to works involving an extension, a material alteration or a material change of use. This includes a requirement for adequate resistance to the spread of fire to and from neighbouring buildings. 

Technical Guidance Document B – Fire Safety (2006) provides specific guidance on construction methods to comply with this requirement. Where works are carried out in accordance with this document this will, prima facie, indicate compliance with the fire safety requirements of the Building Regulations. Compliance with the Building Regulations is first and foremost the responsibility of the owners, designers and builders of the buildings or dwellings concerned.

In broad terms, local authorities have extensive powers of inspection and enforcement under the Building Control Act 1990, the Fire Services Act 1981 and the Planning and Development Acts, all of which may be relevant in relation to fire safety arrangements in residential buildings.

Comments

No comments

Log in or join to post a public comment.