It has long been recognised that there are two potential pathways towards complying a building which has fire hazardous cladding with the Building Code in response to a Building Notice or Building Order from the local Council or the Victorian Building Authority. This can be on the one hand prescriptive compliance with “Deemed to Satisfy” provisions of the Building Code, or the “alternative solution” of achieving performance-based benchmarks. This alternative solution route must be scientifically or technically supported as being an equivalent level of compliance when compared to the prescriptive provisions.
The Building Appeals Board (BAB) may determine a building of sufficient compliance to allow some or all of the cladding to remain via this alternative method. An application would include a supporting fire engineering report that looks at active and passive fire safety mechanisms, such as:
- Automatic sprinkler systems;
- Occupant warning systems;
- Paths of travel and egress;
- Accessibility for fire-fighting personnel; and
- The nature and locations of the cladding products themselves.
Illustrating how the BAB will consider the alternative solution requirements can be demonstrated by the facts of a 2020 application to the Victorian Building Appeals Board. In this instance, the alternative pathway to compliance with the Performance Requirements under the Building Code were upheld in regard to potentially combustible cladding, despite a more cautious approach argued for by the Victorian Building Authority and the Metropolitan Fire Brigade.
In the Building Appeals Board decision of In the matter of 14 Elliot Avenue, Carnegie [2020] VBAB 19, the Board ruled that the prescriptive Deemed to Satisfy test for compliance of combustible cladding, such as Expanded Polystyrene (EPS) panelling, would not necessarily be the governing test if the performance requirements in CP2 and CP4 of the Building Code were satisfied, and if the holistic fire safety situation of the premises otherwise resulted in a satisfactory level of safety.
The relevant site was a building of some 21 self-contained apartments and a basement car parking area, with four storeys above the basement. In response to a Building Notice from the Council calling for combustible external cladding on the façade to be removed, in April 2019 the Owners Corporation lodged an application with the Building Appeals Board seeking a determination under s160A of the Building Act 1993. The determination sought was that the design or construction of the building complies with the performance requirements CP2 and CP4 of the Building Code as an alternative path to compliance.
Combustible EPS cladding had been installed only on the upper two levels of the building and on external walls on balconies, but with no combustible cladding on the ground level. In addition, there was an eyebrow / canopy on the top-most level consisting of combustible Aluminium Composite Panelling (or “ACP”), set back some distance from the edge of the building.
In regard to other fire safety features at the premises, there was sprinkler protection in accordance with AS2118.4 that covered the entire building including the basement carpark. Also, each level containing apartments was supplied with an internal fire hydrant set in an enclosed fire isolated cupboard, plus an external fire hydrant set back from any flammable cladding by a distance of more than three metres.
In summary, the Applicant at hearing highlighted some key features that bolstered a conclusion that the apartment building was compliant in an overall or ‘holistic sense’:
- A reinforced concrete structural frame;
- Automatic fire sprinklers and smoke detection;
- Internal smoke-proof walls between sole occupancy units and corridors;
- Fire separation between the basement car park and habitable levels above; and
- Highly articulated or ‘wedding cake’ external facades that tend to prevent opportunity for vertical fire spread, or flammable materials falling from one level to levels below.
The fire-safety performance-based solutions were supported by the original fire engineering report by the project engineer, and a peer review report from an independent fire engineering firm, both of which had been deemed acceptable by the RBS for the project.
In terms of more recent evidence, the Applicant relied on an audit report employing a Risk Assessment Tool (“RAT”) from Mr Stephen Kip, a fire-engineering and building surveying consultant. According to Mr Kip’s report and use of the RAT, the building as constructed and occupied was classified as: “fire risk category 2, exit risk category 2 – low risk.”
At the hearing the VBA argued that a proper fire risk assessment should result in a “moderate risk” overall for the building, and that the ignition risk was in fact “high” (including under the RAT analysis). Therefore, the VBA called for the removal of all combustible cladding on the balconies, as the minimum option to sufficiently ameliorate fire risk. It was not agreed by the Owners Corporation that this was necessary.
Indeed, it transpired that the Board found that at the time of construction, the design of the building complied with the relevant Building Code performance requirements for fire safety.
Key factors for this conclusion by the Board were:
- There was reliance on CodeMark Certificates and a BRAC Certificate in regard to EPS and ACP panels, and these certifications complied with the Building Code and the Regulations;
- The fire risk for the building was substantially “mitigated” by the sprinkler system installed in accordance with the relevant Australian Standard (ie AS2118.4);
- ACP product was installed on the top level only as an eave feature with no risk of vertical external fire spread (and at the hearing only the MFB took issue with the ACP placement);
- EPS product was only utilised on the top two storeys, and not the ground level or the floor above. The Board decided that it therefore did not cause an undue fire risk for external fire spread, that would be greater than that contemplated by the deemed to satisfy provisions for a two storey Class 2 structure;
- The Board largely accepted the fire engineering advice from the Applicant’s expert Mr Kip, to the effect that EPS was not a banned product at that time, it was not prohibited by the Regulations, did not ignite and sustain flaming in the absence of other combustibles, and it’s mere presence was not an unacceptable fire risk; and
- Configuration of external walls for the separate storeys to ‘cascade back’ in a ‘wedding cake’ type design significantly reduced any chance for flame spread vertically, over multiple levels.
In coming to this conclusion, the Board did not require the removal of EPS panels from external walls on balconies, because it did not agree with the VBA’s argument that the fixture of EPS on balcony walls raised the building’s fire risk grading to “high”.
Instead, the Board stated that the assessment of fire risk for a building is “an integrated assessment which is not automatically determined from a single variable.” Therefore, the probability of ignition was just one factor to consider when deciding the level of risk for the building as a whole.
Furthermore, the Board found the ACP lining on the eave to the top storey “to be of minor consequence to the level of fire safety in the Building”, and did not rule that any of it had to be removed.
In summary, the Board determined that the EPS panels and ACP installed as external cladding complied with Performance Requirements CP2 and CP4 of the Building Code (BCA – Volume 1 of 2016). This was subject to the Owners completing any remedial work measures described in the fire engineering report of 29 January 2016 by the project fire engineer.
Finally, the hearing also dealt with an application under s160 of the Act by the Owners in regard to the fire hydrant and sprinkler booster assembly, which did not comply with the prescriptive Building Code provisions when the Building Permit was approved. The Owners were ultimately successful in their application to dispense with the requirement for the booster assembly to be either shielded with fire resisting material or to be not less than 10 m away from the building.
This outcome came about because:
- The Owners’ fire engineering consultant successfully argued that the current version of AS2419.1-2017 did not mandate hydrant booster shielding in sprinkler protected buildings. Clause 7.6.1 (Sprinkler protected buildings) was relevant here, and no performance-based solution was needed; and
- Given the building frame of fire-resisting reinforced concrete construction, with the front elevation cascading back from ground level upwards, the chances of structural collapse were minimised. So even without fire rated shielding the Board decided that there was enough protection for fire fighters from structural collapse, with the current location of the fire hydrant and booster assembly.
Please note: This application may be decided differently now given the Minister’s prohibition declaration and changes to laws affecting cladding that arose in early 2021.
For related articles on (topic) please see:
How to Respond to Cladding Rectification Notices and Orders in Victoria
Disclaimer
This article is not legal advice and discusses it’s topic in only general terms. Should you be in need of legal advice, please contact a construction law firm. The experienced team at Lovegrove & Cotton can help property owners and building practitioners resolve any type of building dispute.
Written by Justin Cotton