Elevator shafts and machine rooms are among the most debated spaces in sprinkler design. On one side, NFPA 13 says "sprinklers everywhere"; on the other, elevator manufacturers say "water hitting the control panel will destroy the system." The solution lies in combining two standards: NFPA 13 defines the sprinkler requirement; ASME A17.1 defines shunt trip and automatic recall mechanisms. This article explains the correct approach from both NFPA and electrical engineering perspectives.

Why Sprinklers in Elevators?

Elevator shafts are chimneys that carry smoke to the building's upper floors. Elevator cables alone, oil accumulation at the shaft bottom, and electronic components in the machine room create fire risk. A shaft + machine room without sprinklers = the building's vertical smoke path.

What Does NFPA 13 Say?

NFPA 13 considers elevator sprinklers in three separate locations:

1. Pit

The lowest point of the elevator shaft. Required: For hydraulic elevators (oil leak risk). In electric elevators where condensation is likely.

2. Hoistway (Along the Shaft)

Not required (in most cases). Pre-NFPA 13-2022 this was stricter; the current standard allows omission when the shaft is fully enclosed and separated by 2-hour fire-rated walls.

3. Machine Room

Required: The elevator motor, frequency converter, and control panel pose fire risks. NFPA 13 requires sprinklers here — but ASME A17.1 requires elevator power to be cut when these sprinklers activate.

Shunt Trip: Critical Integration

If power isn't cut the moment a sprinkler activates and water reaches the machine room, the risk becomes electrocution rather than fire. Solution:

Status in Turkey

BYKHY Article 96 and TS EN 81-72 regulate elevator fire safety in Turkey. Critical points:

Four Common Mistakes

  1. No sprinkler in machine room: "Elevator company said no" leads to no sprinkler at all. NFPA 13 violation.
  2. Machine room sprinkler without shunt trip: Reverse problem — sprinkler activation leaves electrical system submerged.
  3. No Phase I Recall testing: NFPA 72 requires at least annual Phase I & II testing. Rarely performed in Turkey.
  4. Forgetting hydraulic elevator pits: Hydraulic systems have oil reservoirs presenting additional fire risk. NFPA 13 mandates pit sprinklers.

Firefighter Elevator Special Rules

Turkey requires at least one elevator to be a "firefighter elevator" in buildings above 21.5 m. Features:

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Conclusion

Elevator sprinklers sit at the intersection of sprinkler + electrical + elevator mechanics. Three disciplines must work together: (1) NFPA 13 defines the sprinkler mandate, (2) ASME A17.1 requires shunt trip and recall to protect elevator logic, (3) building management must regularly perform Phase I testing. In projects where this trio is incomplete, the problem isn't noticed until the day of the fire.

Sources & Further Reading

Core references: NFPA 13 - Installation of Sprinkler Systems, NFPA 72 - National Fire Alarm Code, ASME A17.1 - Safety Code for Elevators, TS EN 81-72 - Fire-Fighter Elevators, Turkey BYKHY Article 96. Original NFPA post: NFPA Today - Elevator Sprinkler Requirements.

FS

Fatih Selvi

Mechanical engineer and software developer. 16+ years of MEP and fire protection experience.