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Below Grade Fires

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From a firefighting point of view, a cellar is the most ... and injured battling cellar fires than are killed and injured battling fires on any upper floor. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Below Grade Fires


1
Below Grade Fires
  • OFC Training Officers Seminar
  • November 30, 2004
  • Don Knap, HES-FIRE

2
  • From a firefighting point of view, a
    cellar is the most dangerous area inside a
    building.
  • More firefighters are killed and injured
    battling cellar fires than are killed and
    injured battling fires on any upper floor.
  • Dangers Include
  • Fire
  • Explosions
  • Collapse
  • Drowning
  • Toxic gases
  • Electrocution

3
Below Grade Fires
  • - Commercial/Industrial
  • - Residential
  • - Clandestine

4
Basement
  • a full story below grade
  • One-half or more of its height is above grade
    level
  • When calculating the height of a building, the
    basement is counted as the first floor

5
Cellar
  • is a below grade area that has more than half of
    its height below grade.
  • can be below grade on one side of a building and
    above grade at the sides and rear (up to 50)
  • can be totally below grade

6
Hazards
  • Grow Operations
  • Haz Mat
  • Building Construction
  • Building Design
  • Age/Maintenance of Building
  • Fuel Source
  • Water Supply
  • Electricity

7
Grow Operations
  • High voltage electrical ballasts
  • High pressure grow lamps
  • Unfused, no disconnect, hydro source
  • Entanglement potential
  • Set traps
  • Limited entry/ventilation/egress due to security
  • Mould

8
HazMat
  • Minimize the surprise factor through
    preplan/tacticals
  • No garage, suspect basement workshop
  • 1 lb. propane cylinder 2 sticks dynamite
  • Consumer chemicals and aerosols

9
Building Construction
  • Lightweight truss
  • Well involved fire
  • - was 20 minutes to collapse
  • - now 16-18 or less with superior insulation
  • Interior finish
  • Exposed ABS plastic conduit etc.
  • Renovations

10
Building Design
  • Enclosed/open stairway
  • Secured building
  • Underground parking
  • - propane/natural gas fueled
  • - maintenance of sprinklers/exhaust fans
  • - disorientation hazard for firefighters

11
Age/Maintenance of Building
  • Even without fire, some stairways are old, weak,
    and ready to fall apart under the weight of a
    firefighter and equipment
  • Rapid extension upward
  • Derelict/exposed to weather buildings

12
Fuel Source
  • Natural Gas plastic pipe can melt below ground
    level
  • Rural Size up for propane tank or private gas
    well
  • Oil basement storage tank of relative size to
    occupancy

13
Water Supply
  • Municipal system
  • Rural tanker or drafting source

14
Electricity
  • Firefighter training concentrates mainly on the
    conduction of electricity through hose streams
  • Need to consider
  • - wet flooded floors
  • - wet firefighters
  • - breaching walls/ceilings with metal tools
  • Emergency generators - commercial
  • -
    residential

15
  • Utility control must be accomplished early in
    operations.
  • Pre-plan to identify internal hazards

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25
Fog Streams
  • Fog streams are useful tools when used correctly
    in the appropriate situation
  • Flammable liquid and gas fires
  • Protection of exposures
  • Electrical Fires
  • Foam Application
  • Pick correct tool for the job

26
Using Fog Streams
  • Reduces reach
  • Reduces penetration
  • Reduces visibility around your stream
  • Entrains air (oxygen) into your stream
  • 30 degree fog nozzle moves well over 2000 cfm
  • Increases likelihood of upsetting the thermal
    balance in the space and of producing steam burns

27
Spray and Pray Method
  • get inside, put it on fog, and whip it around
  • Creating massive amounts of steam,
    overpressurizing the room
  • Firefighters unable to move through that
    atmosphere further into the fire building
  • It was way too hot to get inside
  • Building dies a slow death

28
Solid-bore/Straight Streams
  • Airflow volumes introduced into the fire area by
    solid-bore and straight streams from combination
    nozzles are very similar
  • Moves relatively little air,600-700 cfm, into the
    fire area
  • Will not disturb the thermal balance of the room
  • Large volume of water going directly onto the
    fuel in the form of large drops

29
Fog Nozzles as Protection
  • The need for the fog pattern for protection often
    based on airflow patterns, air-movement volumes,
    and velocities experienced without realistic heat
    or confinements of an interior fire condition
  • Using a fog pattern in an unvented interior fire
    will not protect the firefighters but will
    greatly increase danger

30
Training
  • That more live fire training exercises in the
    form of realistic scenarios be provided for all
    suppression personnel as often as possible

31
Ventilation
  • Dangerous temperatures (2000 F) at the high
    levels of the room will remain until complete
    ventilation takes place
  • Solid-bore/straight stream nozzles will not
    overpressurize the room and cause a rapid air
    movement toward the nozzleman
  • Air injected can easily be moved through a 3X4
    foot vent-size opening

32
Ventilation
  • Assignments on the fireground have become more
    demanding. ICS has identified specific jobs with
    limited numbers of firefighters on scene.
  • Ventilation often not given sufficient priority
    and done in a timely manner especially when fog
    streams used

33
Ventilation
  • Is the interior crew safer if we assign
  • - RIT and no ventilation?
  • - Accountability and no ventilation?
  • - Safety Officer and no ventilation?
  • - A ventilation crew to support the attack
    before adding additional handlines?
  • Need priorities and essentials to make
  • fireground safe.

34
IFSTA Essentials IV
  • The application of hose streams must be
    performed with prudent care because of the
    difficulty of ventilating generated steam
  • If ventilation holes cannot be made large enough
    for effective ventilation..then it is important
    to keep the nozzle on straight stream

35
Fire Attack
  • Indirectly through floor
  • Specialized cellar nozzles
  • Flooding the floor
  • Descend hot smoky stairs and get below the heat
    barrier
  • Must be fully coordinated with ventilation
    activities to prevent vertical and horizontal
    fire spread may need creative ventilation
    techniques

36
Training - Fire Below
  • Identify weakened floor joists
  • Terrazo (finished cement) and cement board/tile
  • - increased dead load
  • - contains heat and smoke water evaporates
    quickly or turns to steam
  • - no sagging, spring or spongy feel to
    indicate collapse

37
Size Up
  • Get the big picture
  • Avoid tunnel vision
  • Must do 360
  • Available resources
  • Type of construction
  • Time considerations
  • Etc.
  • Continually evaluate the risk versus gain

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40
When inside
  • Expect the UNexpected
  • Pay attention to surroundings, stop and listen
    (fire/structure/PASS)
  • Try to anticipate what may go wrongbefore it
    does
  • Risk/benefit
  • Check communications often (simplex/relay)

41
Ignoring Changing Fire Conditions
  • Sudden flash of fire out of a room doorway
    rollover
  • Failure to assess the heat buildup in the smoke
    filled room
  • Warning signs of backdraft conditions in smaller
    confined spaces
  • Listening to radio reports of operations above
    them fire extension, ventilation

42
Safety
  • First line of defense is training (ff. survival)
  • Assign a Safety Officer ASAP
  • RIT team/crew requested when a working fire
    confirmed
  • Treat every power line, cable TV, phone line as
    live
  • Too many firefighters inside not doing specific
    tasks
  • Air management accountability

43
Storage
  • Boxes, cartons, furniture
  • Large quantities of combustible merchandise
  • Frequently stacked as high as possible to
    underside of floor above
  • Narrow isles through stored material to access
    utility supply and shutoffs

44
Firefighting Challenges
  • Blocks hose streams need 3 ft. or more
  • Collapse due to water soaking
  • Conceals exact point of fire
  • Flashover/backdraft possibilities
  • Large amounts of water may need to be discharged
  • Activities of crews above

45
Safety
  • Our life expectancy inside a structure is
    limited to the air we carry on our backs (A.
    Brunacini)
  • RITThe time it takes to rescue a firefighter is
    longer than the time allotment for which we carry
    on our backs
  • Low air alarms time in/out (residential/commerci
    al)
  • Use PASS devices
  • Emergency evacuation tones

46
RIT
47
RIT
  • Rapid Intervention isnt rapid
  • RIT should be in place and equipped before
    conditions become unsafe
  • RIT should be observing building and fireground
    operations
  • Deploy a search team (TICs)
  • Send in rescue team
  • Set up lighting to guide

48
RIT
  • Unreasonable to expect a single company/crew to
    locate, package for removal, provide air, to
    extricate from any entrapment, and actually
    remove a firefighter from the structure
  • May be operating under rapidly deteriorating
    conditions
  • Train under realistic conditions
  • - UP stairs.UP ladders

49
Where We Go From Here
  • Operating procedures up to date
  • Training efforts need to be focused on preventing
    us from ever needing to use rapid intervention
  • Training should include getting ourselves out of
    trouble (ff survival)
  • Does your rapid intervention concept work?
  • That more live fire training exercises in the
    form of realistic scenarios be provided for all
    suppression personnel as often as possible

50
  • The first attack hoseline is the single most
    important firefighting action at a fire
  • after accurate size-up
  • The first hoseline stretched at a fire saves
    lives, including saving lives of firefighters

51
  • As the frequency of fires decline in our
    communities and practical training on
    firefighting being carried out less often, is a
    gap growing between what we think we can do
    safely and effectively to fight fires.
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