Means of Escape: Protected Stairways, Inner Rooms & Building Regs Part B

Quick Answer: Building Regulations Approved Document B (Volume 1, Dwellings) requires adequate means of escape from every room in a dwelling. For two-storey houses, open-plan stairs with smoke alarms are generally acceptable. Three-storey houses (including loft conversions) require a protected staircase enclosed with 30-minute fire-rated construction and FD20S fire doors on all rooms opening onto the stair. Inner rooms (rooms only accessible through another room) require either a direct escape window or a protected route through the access room.

Summary

Means of escape is a fundamental life-safety requirement, not a box-ticking exercise. The principles are straightforward: every occupant must be able to escape from any part of the building to a place of safety before fire and smoke make the escape route impassable. The design must assume that a fire could start in any room, and that the building is occupied at night when occupants are asleep.

For most simple two-storey houses, the existing layout with smoke alarms meets Part B without any additional work. The complexity arises with three-storey properties (including loft conversions), properties with open-plan layouts where the only stair exits through a kitchen, and properties with inner rooms (a room you can only get to through another room). These situations require careful design and attention to fire door specification, glazing limitations, and escape windows.

Builders and tradespeople most commonly encounter escape requirements during loft conversions, house extensions (particularly rear extensions that create open-plan layouts where the stair now opens into a kitchen), and property refurbishments where rooms are rearranged. Getting this wrong can delay building control approval and, in the worst case, result in dangerous situations.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Building Type Protected Stair Required? Fire Doors Required? Escape Windows Required?
2-storey house No No (unless garage adjacent) No (unless inner room)
3-storey house Yes FD20S on all rooms opening onto stair Yes at top floor
Loft conversion (3-storey) Yes FD20S at each floor Yes in new loft room
Basement conversion Consider protected stair FD20S recommended Yes in basement rooms
Flat (any floor) Flat front door FD30S FD30S main entrance door Depends on floor level
Inner room N/A N/A Yes (or through protected access room)

Detailed Guidance

Protected Stairways — What They Require

A protected staircase is an enclosed route from the top floor to a final exit. The enclosure must provide:

What opens directly onto the stair?

What does NOT need to be FD20S?

Loft Conversions and Three-Storey Rules

This is where Part B creates the most work in domestic building. Converting a loft to create a third storey triggers the protected staircase requirement even if the house previously had none.

Options:

Option A: Full protected staircase — enclose the entire stair from ground floor to loft with FD20S doors and 30-minute walls. Works well but means every door from hallway to rooms on all floors must become an FD20S with a self-closer. Clients often resist this because self-closing doors are inconvenient. Retrospectively, many installed fire doors end up propped open — making them useless.

Option B: Alternative escape from loft room only — provide escape windows from the loft room (meeting the 0.33m² / 450mm × 450mm requirements) AND protect only the route from the ground floor to the loft stair head with FD20S. This is sometimes possible depending on layout.

Option C: Sprinkler system — installing a domestic sprinkler system to BS 9251 can allow a relaxation of the fire door requirements. Increasingly used in residential loft conversions, especially where the self-closing fire door requirement is impractical.

Building control officers have some discretion in applying Part B to existing dwellings — the principle is "equivalent level of safety" rather than exact compliance with every clause. Get pre-application advice from building control early in the design process.

Inner Rooms

An inner room is a room you can only access through another room (the "access room"). Examples:

If the access room is a kitchen, garage, or any room with significant fuel load or ignition risk, the inner room arrangement is unacceptable without remediation. Solutions:

  1. Provide an escape window from the inner room (minimum 0.33m² opening, 450mm × 450mm min, cill ≤1.1m)
  2. Provide a separate door from the inner room directly to the hall or protected route
  3. Rearrange the layout to eliminate the inner room arrangement

If the access room is a low-risk room (e.g., a dining room), an inner room arrangement may be acceptable if the inner room has an escape window. Confirm with building control.

Escape Windows — Specification and Installation

Escape windows must be:

For roof windows (Velux or similar) in loft conversions, a centre-pivot or top-hung window opened fully provides an adequate escape opening if it meets the above dimensions. Check manufacturer data — not all roof windows have sufficient clear opening.

Where a window is above the ground floor, escape is typically via a fire escape ladder (retained in the room or permanently fixed externally) or by rescue from an external platform. Building control will assess the specific arrangement.

Fire Door Specification and Installation

FD20S (20-minute fire door with smoke seals):

FD30S: same as above but tested to 30 minutes. Required for flat entrance doors, between garage and habitable space, and some commercial situations.

Do not hang fire doors on standard loose-pin butt hinges — fire doors require CE-marked fire-rated hinges.

Frequently Asked Questions

My client wants to remove the hallway wall to create open-plan living — is this allowed?

It depends on the house layout and storeys. In a 3-storey house, removing the hallway wall would typically eliminate the protected staircase, which is unacceptable without compensatory measures. In a 2-storey house, an open-plan ground floor is generally acceptable with appropriate smoke detection (Grade D, LD2), as long as the stair doesn't exit through a kitchen. Always check with building control before removing internal walls on escape routes.

Do all bedroom doors on the first floor of a 3-storey house need to be FD20S?

Yes, in a three-storey house with a protected staircase, all habitable room doors (bedrooms, living rooms, bathrooms) that open directly onto the protected stair and landing must be FD20S with self-closers. This is one of the most contentious requirements — clients resist the self-closing mechanism especially for bedroom doors. Using a door retainer (hold-open device linked to the smoke alarm, which releases on alarm activation) is an alternative but must be correctly specified and maintained.

Can I use glass panels in fire doors for a loft conversion?

Yes, with the right glass. Standard float glass will crack and fall out in a fire. Acceptable glazing options: CE-marked fire-rated glass (e.g., Pyrodur, Contraflam, Georgian wired glass for shorter durations). The glass must be within the certification of the door set. Do not glaze a fire door with standard glass and assume it is compliant.

Does Part B apply to renovations as well as new build?

Part B applies to new build and to "material alterations" — works that would unacceptably affect existing compliance with the Building Regs. If you're converting a loft, extending, or making significant structural alterations, Part B applies to the whole stair/escape route, not just the new work. This can mean upgrading fire doors throughout the house as part of a loft conversion — an unexpected cost that should be included in quotes.

Regulations & Standards