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Technology boost for fire safety response in Dubai

Control room to get real-time alerts from key buildings

- Ramola Talwar Badam rtalwar@thenationa­l.ae

DUBAI // A new Civil Defence control room linked to realtime fire and safety informatio­n at airports, ports and commercial buildings will be launched in a few weeks.

As part of a testing phase, operators yesterday monitored huge screens inside the control room at the authority’s headquarte­rs showing live feeds and data from buildings across Downtown Dubai, Deira, Bur Dubai, Jebel Ali, the airports and from ships at sea.

“All informatio­n about the building and the contact number of the person in charge will be with the control room so quick action can be taken in any emergency, such as a fire or gas leak,” said Lt Col Ali Al Mutawa, assistant director general for smart services.

“In case of sensitive buildings that, for instance, contain hazardous material, there is a predetermi­ned set of resources the operator will mobilise.”

Informatio­n on flights is beamed with the live feed detecting any emergency.

“The airports are a free zone and are under the airport authority. If any incident related to an air crash happens inside the airport, the airport authority has their own private firefighti­ng unit and they will be the lead and we will be the back-up,” Lt Col Al Mutawa said.

“But if there is a fire inside any building in any free zone we will take the lead . If any air crash takes place outside a free zone we will take the lead.”

The developmen­t is part of a comprehens­ive Civil Defence Dubai Life Safety Dashboard framework that began six years ago, with mandatory fire alarm systems installed in 53,823 commercial buildings linked to the existing control room.

A related SOS mobile phone applicatio­n for commercial buildings will go live on Sunday.

This app will allow owners to alert the control room about emergencie­s through their phones.

“The SOS applicatio­n helps to monitor the safety condition. Emergency cases can be reported at one click of a button. It will improve response time and reduce injuries caused by accidents,” said Maj Gen Rashid Al Matrooshi, director general of Dubai Civil Defence.

“It will help to choose equipment needed for a specific incident so we can respond quickly and effectivel­y.”

Apart from a fire, the 24-7 direct alarm system alerts Civil Defence about a gas leak, glitches in the elevator and fire alarms or safety equipment malfunctio­n.

Details about the number of occupants, floor plan, photograph­s of the building and the quickest route to the unit will be made available to the nearest fire station.

“At the moment the installed direct system does the job but with the new app, the owner can check systems in his building. He can monitor if the fire safety maintenanc­e company is doing a good job and can decide to continue or to change the company,” Lt Col Al Mutawa said.

The goal is for all residentia­l buildings to have similar alarm systems installed over the next two years.

A push towards this goal has begun with more than 700 safety panels installed in private residentia­l buildings with plans for this to grow by next year, he said. Once residentia­l buildings are covered in 2019, direct alarms will be included in private villas.

 ?? Ramola Talwar / The National ?? Dubai Civil Defence control room is equipped with screens that show live feeds and data from buildings.
Ramola Talwar / The National Dubai Civil Defence control room is equipped with screens that show live feeds and data from buildings.

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