Gulf News

Hotel fire probe nears completion

MUNICIPAL, POLICE AND CIVIL DEFENCE OFFICIALS COORDINATE TO ASCERTAIN CAUSE AND ASSESS DAMAGE

- By Senior Reporter

Municipal officials are nearing the end of a comprehens­ive investigat­ion into the New Year’s Eve fire at the Address Downtown Hotel.

An investigat­ion has been under way since firefighte­rs waged a 13-hour battle to contain the flames that scorched 40 floors of the facade of the 63-storey hotel. The blackened Downtown Dubai landmark remains sealed off till further notice.

The investigat­ion is expected to be completed within the week, a senior municipal official confirmed yesterday.

In an interview, Marwan Al Mohammad, Director of the Public Health and Safety Department at Dubai Municipali­ty, said that a nine-member Emergency and Crisis Committee – including representa­tives from Dubai Police and Dubai Civil Defence – is conducting the review.

700 workers assigned

Investigat­ors are still sifting through the charred debris left after the aggressive blaze broke out on the 20th floor of the fivestar hotel, which includes 600 apartments.

As many as 700 workers were assigned for the clean-up in the aftermath.

“The fire

caused

the

most damage to the building’s cladding, as its interior structure remained mostly untouched. Our report into the investigat­ion will assess the damage, and with the presence of the building’s owner, police and firefighte­rs, we are sweeping through the hotel floor by floor to evaluate the damage,” said Al Mohammad.

“There are

still

traces

of smoke on some floors, and once the Civil Defence gives us the go-ahead, we will visit them,” said Al Mohammad.

He pointed out that the Emergency and Crisis Committee’s investigat­ion includes a full inventory on the state of the physical elements of the structure including wiring, pipes and support structures to determine the extent of restoratio­n needed to reopen the Address Downtown Hotel.

He ruled out demolition as a possible option, given that the hotel only opened in September 2009 and is relatively young compared to ageing structures in older quarters of the city. And with relatively minor damage to the interior of the building, the structure appears to be sound.

“But the Address Hotel

is new, so it will not come down to that, unlike the [Al Shamsi] building in Deira that had to be demolished because it was almost 40 years old,” he said.

Part of the review will be aided by building and fire code standards in Dubai and across the UAE such as the UAE Fire and Life Safety Code.

Following high-profile fires in Sharjah and in Dubai in 2012, annexures to the UAE Fire and Life Safety Code in November 2012 clearly defined new rules that banned non-fire-rated panels in high-rises.

“All cladding panels shall be tested and approved for combustibi­lity and flame-spread classifica­tion at the maximum thickness intended for use and intended assemblies and shall not contain foamed plastic insulation at its core,” stated the revisions to the code in 2012, adding that “non-rated material is not permitted unless recommende­d by panel manufactur­ers”.

The safety code update stated that cladding and other associated materials “shall be tested as an assembly and shall be certified as capable of preventing the spread of heat, fire, toxic gases, smoke or other defined hazards”.

In addition, to guard against black bitumen sealant on the concrete surface below the panels from acting as a further accelerant, the amendments dictate that “any cladding panels installed shall be completely separated from the building interior by a thermal barrier”.

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 ?? Ahmed Ramzan/Gulf News ?? Surveying the damage The Address Downtown Hotel remains sealed off till further notice. Flames scorched 40 floors of the 63-storey hotel’s facade on New Year’s Eve.
Ahmed Ramzan/Gulf News Surveying the damage The Address Downtown Hotel remains sealed off till further notice. Flames scorched 40 floors of the 63-storey hotel’s facade on New Year’s Eve.
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