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Sealmaster FireFace

Sealmaster FireFace

(Above) FireFace being applied to panelled doors in Kenwood House, Hampstead, London.

Fireface continued Page 2

SEALMASTER FIREFACE

Upgrading doors - “The first non-intrusive, undetectable and fully reversible solution”


 
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INTRODUCTION

Fire spreads more rapidly through period and historical buildings than most others. The widespread use of timber flooring, panelling or laths and other combustible materials such as horse hair and straw explains part of the reason why. The ability of period doors to slow the spread of fire can make a critical difference.

Traditionally, door panels were
constructed of wide sheets of solid timber between 6mm and 15mm thick. Often the panels were jointed and those which were glued typically used an animal glue (which loosens under heat). These doors tend to fissure in the first few minutes of a fire allowing it to break through.

Upgrading doors’ fire resistance to 30 minutes gives vital extra time for people to escape the building and for the emergency services to arrive. It also reduces the potential for damage by fire, smoke (and water). The challenge has been how to achieve this without replacing doorsets or ‘fletching’ (splitting door leafs sectionally,
sandwiching incombustible boards within andreassembling them - a costly and highly intrusive method. Sealmaster’s new FireFace membranes offer the first non-intrusive, undetectable and fully reversible solution.

FireFace membranes were developed by Sealmaster for English Heritage following a review of fire safety in the wake of the Windsor Castle blaze.

 

OBJECTIVE OPINION

Today, FireFace is specified by English Heritage, Heritage Scotland and other leading authorities. It has been featured in a RIBA Journal article and described by House & Garden magazine as a ‘Brilliant British Brainwave’.

In 1999, the Design Council selected FireFace membranes as Millennium Products and exhibited them on the Spiral of Innovation during 2000 in London. FireFace was chosen by the Conran Design Group as one of the UK’s top 120 products and exhibited by the British Council on a year long tour of foreign capitals. FireFace has also been covered in other publications such as the Design Council’s book Here’s to the best of British and the Sharing
Innovation Network’s online databank.

No other product even comes close.

Upgraded Door

 

EVALUATING DOORS

The extent to which a period door requires additional protection to achieve a 30 minute fire rating depends on a number of factors, such as the components’ dimensions, the density and ‘char rate’ of the timber. Some may require little or no surface protection whereas others may not be suitable to upgrade because the panels are too thin (eg less than 6mm in some softwoods) or the rails etc. may be too small to prevent failure through distortion and warping under heat.

Since fire follows the path of least
resistance, other weak points should also be protected - particularly the frame to leaf gaps, glued joints, ironmongery and glazed apertures. Care should also be taken to ensure that any voids around the doorset are adequately protected.For example, between the door frame and adjoining masonry, below or between floorboards etc.
Sealmaster has developed a
comprehensive range of products for these applications, designed with fire safety, conservation, economic and aesthetic priorities equally in mind.

Millennium Product

(Above) The Spiral of Innovation, featuring FireFace among some of the 1,012 Millennium Products selected by the Design Council.

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