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In addition to fire rated separation walls, penetration/opening protection, dampers and smoke tight assemblies..........doors rank right up there with the most important. That's why we try to teach soooooo many people to sleep with their bedroom doors closed (in residential) and remove the chalks in commercial or industrial. People just don't realize how fire behavior acts and reacts when ventilation is introduced or supported by one's actions or ommissions.LGreene said:but I'm trying to learn more about how doors fit into the bigger picture too.
We need to step up this effort somehow. Someone just sent me a tweet saying that they were never taught to sleep with their bedroom door closed, and neither was I. My kids were not taught that in school. Today I had lunch with 3 students from MIT studying fire doors, and we were talking about the Chicago apartment fire with the door propped open for the cat, and none of them had ever thought about what happens when you prop open a fire door. I asked them, what do you do if your clothes catch on fire? Immediately, all 3 of them said, "Stop, drop, and roll!" Closing the door has to be incorporated into the school curriculum. My daughter's kindergarten class just did a unit on fire safety and they incorporated one I didn't remember from school - "Let the firefighter see you."FM William Burns said:That's why we try to teach soooooo many people to sleep with their bedroom doors closed...
Lori,Who's in charge of these fire safety materials, and how do I convince them to teach kids to sleep with their door closed???