Part B Fire Safety: Escape Routes, Compartmentation & Surface Spread of Flame

Quick Answer: Approved Document B (Fire safety) Volume 1 covers residential buildings. Key requirements include: smoke alarms on every storey, interconnected and mains-wired in new dwellings; fire doors to rooms opening onto the staircase in loft conversions; protected escape route (30-minute fire resistance corridor and stair) in HMOs and multi-storey conversions. Surface spread of flame must meet Class 1 (BS 476) for circulation spaces.

Summary

Fire safety is one of the most legally consequential areas of Building Regulations. Failures in fire safety have caused deaths in UK residential buildings, and contractors who install non-compliant fire doors, inadequate detection, or compromised escape routes carry real legal exposure. Part B is not something to interpret loosely.

Approved Document B Volume 1 applies to dwellinghouses and flats. Volume 2 applies to buildings other than dwellings. The 2019 edition introduced changes following the Grenfell Tower fire, particularly around external wall cladding (important for buildings over 11m and irrelevant to most domestic work) but the fundamental domestic fire safety requirements are well-established.

The most common points of failure in domestic building work are: loft conversions without upgrading the escape route; conversions to flats without proper fire compartmentation; fire doors not installed to the correct specification; and smoke alarms that are not mains-wired or interconnected as required. Understanding these requirements saves callbacks and avoids liability.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Building Type Fire Door Requirement Smoke Detection Escape Route
2-storey house (new build) FD30S to habitable rooms on staircase Mains interlinked — all floors Openable windows or protected stair
Loft conversion (new bedroom) FD30S to all rooms on staircase from ground to loft Upgrade to mains interlinked throughout Escape window in loft room OR protected stair
3-storey house FD30S to all rooms on staircase Mains interlinked all floors Protected stair (30min fire resistance) required
Conversion to 2 flats FD30S or FD60 to each flat entrance Mains interlinked in each flat Each flat has independent protected escape
HMO FD30S per room where applicable As per fire risk assessment Protected common areas, alarm system
Fire Resistance Period Application Notes
30 minutes (REI 30) Internal doors on escape route FD30 designation
60 minutes (REI 60) Flat compartment walls and floors Between each flat
90 minutes (REI 90) Some commercial/mixed use Not typical residential
120 minutes (REI 120) Structural elements in higher risk Specialist application
Surface Spread of Flame BS 476 Class BS EN 13501 Class Location
Best Class 1 Class B Escape routes mandatory
Standard Class 2 Class C General internal rooms
Acceptable Class 3 Class D Limited use only
Not permitted in escape routes Class 4 Class E/F External use only

Detailed Guidance

Loft Conversion Fire Safety

A loft conversion adding a new habitable room (bedroom, study, etc.) creates a three-storey dwelling. The third floor is the highest risk — occupants furthest from the exit. Part B requires one of two solutions:

Option 1 — Escape window:

Option 2 — Protected escape route:

In practice, Option 2 (protected stair) is more common because it provides better protection and many loft bedrooms do not have suitable windows for escape.

Upgrading the existing dwelling: When a loft conversion is added to an existing 2-storey house, the existing dwelling must also be upgraded. This typically means:

Building Control will inspect and require this upgrade before signing off the loft conversion.

Conversions to Flats

Converting a house to flats is one of the highest-risk domestic building operations from a fire safety perspective. Each flat must be a separate fire compartment.

Compartment floors and walls:

Flat entrance doors:

Fire stopping:

Smoke Alarms

New dwellings (Building Regulations Part B):

Existing dwellings (material alteration — e.g. loft conversion):

Carbon monoxide (CO) alarms: Required under Building Regulations Approved Document J when a new combustion appliance is installed; strongly recommended in all rooms with a gas or solid fuel appliance. From October 2022, CO alarms are also required in all rooms with a fixed combustion appliance in rental properties (Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (Amendment) Regulations 2022).

Surface Spread of Flame

The classification of interior surfaces affects how fire spreads. In circulation spaces (corridors, stairwells, lobbies), high surface spread of flame would allow fire to travel rapidly and block escape.

Requirements for escape routes:

Testing and certificates: Products used in escape routes should have fire test certificates. If specifying unusual finishes in a staircase or common area, confirm the fire classification with the manufacturer.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a smoke alarm need to be hardwired in an extension?

If the extension adds a new habitable room and constitutes notifiable building work, the smoke detection throughout the dwelling must meet Building Regulations standards — which means mains-wired, interconnected alarms. Battery alarms are not compliant for notifiable building work. The electrical work for the alarm installation is itself notifiable under Part P.

What type of fire door do I need for an internal door in a loft conversion?

FD30S — 30 minutes fire resistance with cold smoke seal. The door must also have a self-closing device (typically a surface-mounted or concealed overhead closer). The door must be installed in a solid hardwood or engineered timber frame — not a standard softwood lining. The combination of door, frame, hinges, intumescent strips, smoke seals, and closer must match a tested and certified specification.

Can a customer refuse to have fire doors installed in their loft conversion?

No — fire doors on the escape route are a Building Regulations requirement, not a preference. Building Control will not sign off the loft conversion without them. The customer can choose the aesthetics (there are attractive fire doors in period styles) but cannot opt out of the fire safety requirement.

What is the difference between an FD30 and FD30S fire door?

FD30 provides 30 minutes fire resistance but has no smoke seal — it will pass fire resistance tests but allows smoke to pass around the door. FD30S has an additional cold smoke seal (a brush or intumescent seal in the door rebate or frame) that limits smoke passage under normal temperature conditions. On escape routes, FD30S is required — smoke is more dangerous than flame in most domestic fire fatalities.

Do I need Building Regulations sign-off for changing fire doors in an HMO?

HMOs are subject to the Housing Act 2004 (licensing and HMO Management Regulations) as well as Building Regulations. A fire risk assessment is required for HMOs with 5+ occupants. Replacing fire doors is generally maintenance, but if the building is being re-fitted or altered, Building Control may be involved. In all cases, the fire door specification must meet the requirements of the HMO's fire risk assessment.

Regulations & Standards