Building standards technical handbook 2020: domestic

The building standards technical handbooks provide guidance on achieving the standards set in the Building (Scotland) Regulations 2004. This handbook applies to a building warrant submitted on or after 1 March 2021 and to building work which does not require a warrant commenced from that date.

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2.6 Spread to neighbouring buildings

Mandatory Standard

Standard 2.6

Every building must be designed and constructed in such a way that in the event of an outbreak of fire within the building, the spread of fire to neighbouring buildings is inhibited.

2.6.0 Introduction

In order to reduce the danger to the occupants of other buildings, one building should be isolated from another by either construction or distance. The distance between a building and its relevant boundary is dictated by the amount of heat that is likely to be generated in the event of fire. This will be influenced by the extent of openings or other unprotected areas in the external wall of the building.

The guidance for fire spread to neighbouring buildings should not be assessed in isolation and reference should be made to the guidance to Standard 2.4 for fire spread in cavities and the guidance to Standard 2.7 for fire spread on external walls.

Scottish Advice Note: External Wall Systems – draft guidance on the risk assessment and remediation of cladding on existing buildings is available online and will be published in summer 2021. Following consultation on the Scottish Advice Note, the document recommends that:

“any building extensively clad with EWS incorporating Category 3 MCM should have the MCM removed without delay.  Interim measures may need to be put in place until this is done.  Buildings that are partially clad in Category 3 MCM may also require remediation.  Any decision not to remove Category 3 MCM from a partially clad building must be robustly justified in the fire safety risk assessment and any accompanying appraisal report”.

To align with the advice above, guidance to this standard is amended, recommending that Category 3 Metal Composite Material (MCM)  cladding should not be used in any situation. For this purpose, Category 3 MCM cladding is defined as two thin metal skins bonded together using a core material, typically 3 to 7 mm thick, with a calorific value of more than 35 MJ/Kg.

As a further interim measure, citation of BS 8414/BR135 tests is removed as ‘Alternative Guidance’. Verifiers are requested to notify Building Standards Division of any building warrant applications made citing BS 8414 as a route to compliance.

Conversions - in the case of conversions, as specified in regulation 4, the building as converted shall meet the requirements of this standard in so far as is reasonably practicable, and in no case be worse than before the conversion (regulation 12, schedule 6).

2.6.1 Fire resistance of external walls

Apart from unprotected areas, as described in clause 2.6.2, external walls should have:

  • short fire resistance duration, if more than 1m from the boundary, or

  • medium fire resistance duration, if not more than 1m from the boundary.

However short fire resistance duration is sufficient even if not more than 1m from the boundary, for the following:

Fire resistance duration need not be provided for a building ancillary to a dwelling, comprising a carport, covered area, greenhouse, summerhouse, or swimming pool enclosure unless the building contains oil or liquefied petroleum gas fuel storage (see section 3 and section 4).

2.6.2 Unprotected area

An unprotected area means any part of an external wall (including a door or window opening) which does not attain the appropriate fire resistance duration as recommended in the table to clause 2.6.1.

An unprotected area does not include a fixed unopenable window where the frame and glazing has the appropriate fire resistance duration. Any wallhead fascia, soffit or barge board, or any cavity vents or solum vents may also be excluded from the unprotected area calculation (for external wall cladding see clause 2.6.4).

Up to 500mm from boundary - where the external wall of a building is not more than 500mm from the boundary there should be no unprotected area, other than any wallhead fascia, soffit or barge board, or any cavity vents or solum vents.

Up to 1m from boundary - where the external wall of a building is more than 500mm but not more than 1m from the boundary, the level of unprotected area is limited to:

  1. the external wall of a protected zone

  2. an area of not more than 0.1m2, which are at least 1.5m from any other unprotected area in the same wall

  3. an area of not more than 1m2, which are at least 4m from any other unprotected area in the same wall (the 1m2 unprotected area may consist of two or more smaller areas which when combined do not exceed an aggregate area of 1m2).

2.6.3 The simple geometry method

More than 1m from boundary - where the external wall of a building is more than 1m from the boundary the amount of unprotected area (in square metres) may be equivalent to six times the distance (in metres) to the boundary. Therefore if the distance to the boundary is at least 1m, the unprotected area should not exceed 6m2, if the distance to the boundary is at least 2m, the unprotected area is 12m2, and so on.

Where the external wall of a building is more than 6m from the boundary, the amount of unprotected area is unlimited.

The use of the simple geometry method described above is limited to buildings which are more than 1m from the boundary, not more than 9m in height, and the length of the side of the building facing the boundary is not more than 24m. Any external side of a building which makes an angle of more than 800 with the plane of reference can be ignored in the calculation of unprotected area. The diagram below provides a typical example of a conservatory attached to a house.

Figure 2.3. Conservatory example

Conservatory example
 

Where a domestic building exceeds these limits, reference could be made to the Enclosing Rectangle Method (Table B) contained in the non-domestic guidance document or the Building Research Establishment Report ‘External fire spread: building separation and boundary distances’ (BR 187, 1991). In these cases, for the purpose of calculating the enclosing rectangle, a separating wall or separating floor should be regarded as a compartment wall or compartment floor.

2.6.4 External wall cladding

External wall cladding includes all non load-bearing external wall cladding systems attached to the structure, for example, composite panels, clay or concrete tiles, slates, pre-cast concrete panels, stone panels, masonry, profiled metal sheeting including sandwich panels, timber panels, weather boarding, thermally insulated external wall rendered systems, glazing systems and other ventilated cladding systems. For the purposes of compliance with Standard 2.6, external wall cladding includes spandrel panels and infill panels.

All situations – Category 3 Metal Composite Material (MCM) should not be used as a component of external wall cladding (see note in 2.6.0).

Not more than 1m from a boundary - External wall cladding not more than 1m from a boundary should achieve a European Classification A1 or A2.

More than 1m from a boundary - Fire within the building may break out through a window or door opening and as a consequence, the cladding, once ignited, would contribute to the heat generated from the fire. Therefore where the cladding is more than 1m from a boundary and is constructed from products more than 1mm thick that has European Classification B, C, D or E (as described in annex 2.B), the cladding should be included in the calculation of unprotected area.

Storey height more than 11m - However, regardless of the distance from the boundary, any external wall cladding on a building with a storey height more than 11m above ground should be constructed from products which achieve European Classification A1 or A2 (Also, see guidance to standards 2.4 and 2.7).

However combustible cladding need not be included in the calculation of unprotected area where:

  • the combustible cladding is attached to the structure of the building and the external wall contains no openings other than the small openings described in clause 2.6.2b, and

  • the wall behind the cladding (or the cladding itself) has the appropriate fire resistance duration from the inside.

Houses – External wall cladding to a house need not achieve European Classification A1 or A2 where the external wall has the appropriate fire resistance and the cladding achieves European Classification B. In such cases the cladding may be excluded from the unprotected area calculation regardless of openings.

2.6.5 Combustibility

Every part of an external wall including external wall cladding (see clause 2.6.4 for exceptions) not more than 1m from a boundary or the external wall of a high rise domestic building, should be constructed from products which achieve European Classification A1 or A2. This does not apply to insulation exposed in a cavity that is between two leaves of masonry or concrete at least 75mm thick, and which has a cavity barrier around all openings in the wall and at the top of the wall-head.

However a structural frame and any thermal insulation material in the frame not more than 1m from a boundary may be constructed from combustible products provided:

  • no storey height is more than 18m, and

  • the recommendations in clauses 2.6.1 and 2.6.2 have been followed, and

  • any external wall cladding is constructed from products which achieve European Classification A1 or A2 (see clause 2.6.4 for exceptions).

See the guidance to Standards 2.4 and 2.7 for additional guidance in relation to cavities and external wall cladding systems.

2.6.6 Supporting structure

Where an element of structure provides support to an external wall (including external wall cladding) which has a fire resistance duration (as recommended in the guidance to clauses 2.6.1 and 2.6.2) the supporting element of structure should also have at least the same fire resistance duration.

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