Wrightstyle Limited is one of the UK’s leading
suppliers of specialist glass and integrated steel and glass systems
with an international client base. Simon Bennett, the company’s
international sales director, explains why we should all beware of
Christmas.
At Wrightstyle, we’re justifiably proud to be making the world a
safer place. Our specialist steel and glass systems are increasingly
being recognised as among the most advanced in the world for
containing fire, blast and ballistic threats.
But there’s one threat that we can’t guard against because it’s a
big, bad world out there, and particularly at Christmas. In fact,
it’s no coincidence that Santa is an anagram of Satan.
According to the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA)
more than 80,000 UK citizens end up in A&E over the festive period –
some 6,000 on Christmas Day alone.
It’s not just kitchen burns or cutting your finger while peeling the
potatoes – or children falling off new bikes or rocking horses.
A few specific Christmas horrors are that over 30 UK citizens have
died since 1996 by watering their Christmas tree while the Christmas
lights were plugged in.
So far so stupid but, in a three-year period, 19 people have also
died believing that Christmas decorations were chocolate.
British hospitals report about four broken arms each year after
cracker pulling accidents and five Britons are injured every
Christmas in accidents involving out-of-control Scalextric cars.
More predictably, about eight Britons crack their skulls whilst
throwing up into the loo and end up in hospital. (Moral: be very
careful how many sherries you give to Aunt Mabel).
Here at Wrightstyle we can’t prevent any of those accidents. But we
can, and do, prevent others. The International Association of Fire
and Rescue Services estimates that, every year, there are between
seven and eight million fires worldwide.
They cause between 70-80 thousand deaths and between 500-800,000
injuries. In Europe alone, there are up to 2.5 million fires and
25,000 fatalities every year.
The World Fire Statistics Centre estimates the cost of fire in
developed countries to be some 1% of GDP, with an average of one
fire death per 100 fires – and average death rates of three deaths
per 100,000 of population.
That does, however, throw up some anomalies. For example, Japan’s
reported fire rate is about 1/30th of reported fires in the USA – a
staggering disparity given the differences in population size.
In terms of fire deaths per 100,000 of population, the most
dangerous place to live is Russia, with 12.8 deaths. Russia is
swiftly followed by Estonia (9.4), Latvia (8.4), Ukraine (8.0),
Lithuania (6.7) and Moldova (5.0).
The UK is comparatively safe at 0.8 of the population, roughly on a
par with Ireland and Croatia – but worse than the best countries,
Laos and Vietnam, that have a mortality rate of only 0.1.
However, looking at the number of fire deaths per 100 fires throws
up a different picture. Here, again per 100,000 head of the
population, Moldova comes out worst at 8.9. Russia and the Ukraine
aren’t far behind (both at 7.9).
On that test, the UK is one of the safest places on the planet with
only a 0.1 mortality rate per 100 fires – a statistic that
demonstrates that, when fire breaks out, we’re relatively
well-equipped to deal with it.
Underlining that fact, in the year to March 2007, there were 448
fire deaths in the UK – a drop of 5%, and the lowest figure for over
50 years.
Primary fires (defined as being inside a building) fell by 5% to
156,800 - the lowest total since 1983. Within that figure, fires in
residential property hit a 30 year low (55,000, down 4%), while
fires in other buildings - including workplaces and areas where
people gather - were at their lowest since 1958 (down 6%).
That decrease is the result of several factors – for example, better
building design, fire alarms, less flammable house furnishings, and
faster response times from the fire services.
But it’s the big buildign fires that have the greatest potential to
do the greatest damage – both financially and to human life. That’s
where building and safety regulations have made a huge impact.
At Wrightstyle, we’ve seen a sea-change in risk management in
commercial buildings. Only a few years ago, fire safety was an
adjunct to that building’s design – a necessary inconvenience, but
little more than that.
Now, fire safety is at the heart of what good building design is
about. It’s about designing in containment so that a fire can’t
spread to other parts of the building, and it’s about designing in
safe areas that can be used for escape.
It’s meant that we have had to change alongside that evolution in
fire and safety regulation. Our systems are now as aesthetically
pleasing as aluminium, while giving the enormous safety advantages
that only a steel system can give.
We’ve also always sought to be at the forefront of fire, ballistic
and blast safety and, with architectural specifications becoming
increasing global, we have had our glazing systems tested under US
specifications.
The addition of US test certification involved the hose stream test,
no longer part of test regimes elsewhere, where a jet of cold water
is aimed at the superheated glass and steel assembly immediately
after the furnace test. It’s about testing the structural integrity
of the system against a building’s sprinkler system or the water
jets of firefighters.
The hose stream test, regarded as being notoriously difficult,
ensures that our systems are demonstrably among the safest on the
international market, and underlines their versatility across the
full range of both interior and exterior applications.
Our development programme has also been about mitigating against new
threats, and our latest multi-panel curtain walling system has been
tested against a simulated lorry bomb attack – that’s a charge of
500 kg of TNT-equivalent explosive set off adjacent to the test
assembly.
In the test, carried out at RAF Spadeadam in Northumberland, the
simulated lorry bomb attack was immediately followed by a simulated
car bomb attack (100 kilos of TNT). The lorry bomb was detonated 75
metres from the test rig, whilst the car bomb was detonated at a
distance of 20 metres to produce a higher pressure loading and shock
on the façade.
The importance of those successful tests is that, in urban areas,
between 80-85% of all secondary blast injuries are caused by flying
glass. Our latest system, which looks identical to a non-fire rated
system, has taken the glass from the bomber’s arsenal – and we’re
now installing it internationally.
That doesn’t mean, of course, that that we can mitigate against all
risk. Some, frankly, can’t be guarded against. Take Aeschylus, for
example, the Greek playwright who died in 458 BC when an eagle
dropped a tortoise on his head. (The tortoise survived,
incidentally).
Other risks can be foreseen - for example, the pioneering Franz
Reichelt who in 1912 fell to his death off the first deck of the
Eiffel Tower while testing his fantastic new invention, the coat
parachute.
Or, on a glass related theme, the Toronto lawyer who in 1993 also
fell to his death, after he threw himself through a window on the
24th floor of the Toronto-Dominion Centre in order to prove that the
glass was unbreakable. (It wasn’t ours, by the way).
Just remember that Christmas is especially dangerous. There may be
1,200 chainsaw accidents a year, but there are over 16,000 people
injured by their sofas.
Socks and tights account for over 10,000 injuries (mainly falling
over while putting them on), and vegetables account for more than
13,000 injuries. (The statistics don’t list which fruit and veg are
most dangerous, so best keep clear of all of them).
If you go out, don’t walk near birdbaths (311 injuries) or wear
wellington boots (5,600). Don’t even think about putting on trousers
(5,900), don’t be rude to the breadbin (91) and be very wary of that
tin of talcum powder (73).
If you can’t eat, relax in the living room, or wear clothes, don’t
make the elementary mistake of thinking that the bathroom is a safe
place. There are over 700 sponge and loofah accidents per year – and
toilet roll holders, strangely, account for another 300 visits to
A&E.
The one thing you can acount on is the growing safety of your home
and office, not least because of the research and development of
companies such as Wrightstyle.
Have a very Happy Christmas!