NIST Releases Second Sofa Super Store Fire Report Following Draft Comments

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WASHINGTON - The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has released its final report on its study of the June 18, 2007, fire at the Sofa Super Store in Charleston, S.C., that trapped and killed nine firefighters, the highest number of firefighter deaths in a single event since 9/11. The final report is strengthened by clarifications and supplemental text based on comments provided by organizations and individuals in response to the draft report of the study, released for public comment on Oct. 28, 2010.


Last surviving members of the initial attack crews exit showroom at approximately 1935 hours.
(Photo courtesy of Police Department, Bill Murton, photographer.)

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The revisions did not alter the study team's main finding: the major factors contributing to the rapid spread of the fire at the Sofa Super Store were large open spaces with furniture providing high-fuel loads, the inward rush of air following the breaking of windows, and a lack of sprinklers.

Based on its findings, the study team made 11 recommendations for enhancing building, occupant and firefighter safety nationwide. In particular, the team urged state and local communities to adopt and strictly adhere to current national model building and fire safety codes. These codes are used as models for building and fire regulations promulgated and enforced by U.S. state and local jurisdictions. Those jurisdictions have the option of incorporating some or all of the code's provisions but often adopt most provisions.

If today's model codes had been in place and rigorously followed in Charleston in 2007, the study authors said, the conditions that led to the rapid fire spread in the Sofa Super Store probably would have been prevented.

Specifically, the NIST report calls for national model building and fire codes to require sprinklers for all new commercial retail furniture stores regardless of size, and for existing retail furniture stores with any single display area of greater than 190 square meters (2,000 square feet). Other recommendations include adopting model codes that cover high fuel load situations (such as a furniture store), ensuring proper fire inspections and building plan examinations, and encouraging research for a better understanding of fire situations such as venting of smoke from burning buildings and the spread of fire on furniture.

Two of the recommendations in the draft report were slightly modified to increase their effectiveness. The recommendation "that all state and local jurisdictions ensure that fire inspectors and building plan examiners are professionally qualified to a national standard" was improved by listing three nationally accepted certification examinations as examples of "how professional qualification may be demonstrated." Another recommendation has been enhanced by urging state and local jurisdictions to "provide education to firefighters on the science of fire behavior in vented and non-vented structures and how the addition of air can impact the burning characteristics of the fuel."

NIST is working with various public and private groups toward implementing changes to practices, standards, and building and fire codes based on the findings from this study.

The complete text of the final report, Volumes I and II, may be downloaded as Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) files. For a detailed summary of the Sofa Super Store study, its findings and recommendations, and links to supporting materials such as graphics and video segments from computer simulations of the fire, go to "NIST Study on Charleston Furniture Store Fire Calls for National Safety Improvements" at www.nist.gov/el/fire_research/charleston_102810.cfm.

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March 15, 2011

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I was fortunate enough to see some draft comments on the next generation NFPA 1403 live fire training standard today, and there is an eerie similarity to the C9 incident analysis.

A high percentage of training fire LODDs have resulted from a fire that is stoked too much, resulting in a ventilation-controlled fire. Adding ventilation to a ventilation-controlled fire without adequate waterpower for immediate knockdown almost always results in...FLASHOVER.

That sounds exactly like what occurred at the Sofa Super Store fire when the front windows were broken out - a bad situation was almost instantaneously made worse by adding ventilation to a ventilation-controlled fire.

There are lessons for both fireground operations and training in those two documents.
Where ever those fire schools/academy's are they aren't around here. I've never been in a burn building where there was any chance of a flashover. The buildings we train at have steel windows that allow plenty of air flow so there's no real pressure built up by heat and smoke to risk that sort of event.

When you watched the video for the C9 fire, once you saw those front windows being taken you knew the place was going to get more intense fast. I don't know if they had the option of not breaking them since it was a bow string construction and they weren't going on the roof (which vertical ventilation would have been best).

Ventilation is a sometimes tricky situation but always important.
ANY burn building can have a flashover if the fuel load is not kept small.

The point that was made is that if you have enough fuel to create a ventilation-controlled fire (as opposed to a fuel-controlled fire) then it doesn't matter how good the ventilation is.

As for the C9 incident, you might want to look at some of the documentation about the trusses. Some parts of the structure were parallel-chord trusses, and one section was steel I-beams. All sections of the roof support system failed in the collapse.

Likewise, vertical ventilation would have been useless for the C9 fire. There was no chance that an adequate vent hole could have been cut due to the high fuel loading, the nature of the fuel, and the rapid firespread.

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