Conflagration -Say It Three Times Fast

Conflagration is defined as, a large disastrous and destructive fire that threatens human life, animal life, health, and/or property. We have started to hear words like this, along with new ones like Megafire, a large fire devastating areas of 100,000 or more acres. Only three percent of fires reach the Megafire level, but they are responsible for fifty percent of the total burned areas on the planet. Today, we also talk in terms of Giga fires, these fires are typically classified as fires greater than one million acres. While the terms are often being used to describe wildland fires, this cannot distract from the destructive nature of these large-scale fires.

 

 

A conflagration in a building, is simply a structural fire that completely encompasses the building, and we have many examples of tragic structures fires meeting this definition. The 1901 Chicago Iroquois Theater Fire is an example of one such fire that claimed 602 lives. The fire completely engulfed the building structure, but the exterior was left largely intact. It was re-built as the Colonial Theater only to be demolished, to build the current structure, the Oriental Theater, in 1925.

 

This was the fire we began to control with minimum national building codes and standard requiring different levels of fire protection. The amount of building fires in structures with modern fire protection, both active (automatic fire sprinklers) and passive (fire resistant material) reaching these levels are mostly unheard of in today’s modern construction. These minimum requirements have allowed us to drastically reduce the overall risk of a true conflagration in a structure.

 

The 38-story high-rise, One Meridian Plaza fire, on February 23, 1991, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is an excellent example of fire protection systems controlling a fire that was rapidly reaching building conflagration. The building was being retrofitted with automatic fire sprinklers when a fire started on the 22nd floor, in an area not protected with automatic fire sprinklers. The fire burned unabated until it reached the 30th floor and was ultimately controlled by the first fire-affected floor to have automatic fire sprinklers.

 

Today’s concern must center around the urban conflagration risk. Urban conflagration is defined as a large disastrous and destructive fire that spreads beyond natural or artificial barriers. We have seen this play out in the wildland fires currently devastating much of the United States. California fires alone have already seen fires surpassing four million acres of lost land, killing thirty one people, and destroying 8,454 structures.

In 1904, Baltimore, Maryland, suffered a catastrophic urban conflagration. It raged for thirty hours, burning 2,500 building structures, leaving 35,000 people unemployed, and an estimated property loss of over four billion dollars in today’s figures. While most agree that the fire did not directly have any reported deaths, five lives were indirectly attributed to the fire. This is the fire that opened the door for the discussion of modern-day national standardization of firefighting equipment in the United States. The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) adopted a national standard for fire hydrants and hose connections as a direct result of the fire. The City of Balti

more was able to rebuild in an unprecedented short time frame of two years, adopting building codes that stressed fire protection standards.

As the modern world becomes denser and as we continue to build mix-use and multi-housing complexes to house our ever-increasing population, so does the risk for urban conflagration. The utilization of national building codes and standard must continue to protect new construction with fire protection systems aimed at controlling individual structural fires but does not adequately address existing structure without fire protection systems that become potential ignition sources in the urban conflagration scenario. This is where enhancements to fire protection must be considered to prevent the outside-in-fire and the fire spread from structure to structure. The fire protection systems within a structure are not designed to control fires starting on the exterior. If we have clusters of dense housing without proper fire protection in every structure, the risk of catastrophic failure becomes exponential.

Simply protecting the inside of a structure, without proper fire protection and/or separation in adjoining structures leads to a potential risk of a large disastrous and destructive fire that spreads beyond natural or artificial barriers, that will ultimately threaten human life, animal life, health, and/or property