When a building burns, flame and thermal radiation can damage adjacent buildings — this is an exposure fire. In dense urban centers and industrial parks, a neighbor's fire can ignite your building. NFPA 80A governs exposure protection; NFPA 13 covers external sprinkler systems. Design and application principles below.
How Exposure Fire Spreads
- Radiant heat: Like the sun; can crack glass at 10 m.
- Convective heat: Hot air and smoke carried by wind.
- Direct flame contact: If fire reaches close proximity.
- Firebrands: Flying sparks/embers start roof fires.
NFPA 80A evaluates exposure risk via radiant heat flux calculations. Neighbor fire size, building facade area, and separation distance are key parameters.
NFPA 80A Analysis
NFPA 80A assigns risk level based on clear separation distance:
- Under 1.5 m: high risk — fire wall or sprinkler required
- 3-10 m: evaluate by façade type
- Over 10 m: low risk — standard glazing sufficient
Combustible façade (wood, EIFS): extra risk factor applied.
External Deluge Sprinkler Design
For high-risk façades, external (outside) deluge sprinkler:
- Open nozzle: no thermal response, fires when signal received
- Deluge valve: activated by detection signal or manual open
- Design density: 12.2 mm/min (0.3 gpm/ft²) over façade area
- Sprinkler spacing: max 3 m; pipe sized accordingly
- Water curtain / drencher: wets wall to absorb radiant heat
Passive Alternatives
- Fire wall: 2-4 hour masonry or concrete wall; full separation.
- Fire-rated glazing: Pyrostop, Pilkington Pyroclear.
- Non-combustible cladding: A1/A2 class (aluminum composite, mineral wool).
Industrial Park Applications
For high-flammability industries (chemical storage, paint, solvent):
- NFPA 30 tanks require exposure deluge when separation insufficient
- Tank-to-tank cooling sprinkler + foam combination
- Dominant wind direction: identify most exposed façade and protect it
Situation in Turkey
In Istanbul's Grand Bazaar, Tahtakale, Eminönü, building-to-building gaps are 0-2 m. Exposure risk is extreme. When a fire starts, 10-20 shops burn in succession. Without external sprinklers or fire walls, protecting these historic districts is very difficult.
Common Mistakes
- No NFPA 80A analysis ever done: Risk unknown.
- Deluge valve not maintained: Seized, won't open.
- External sprinkler frozen: Winter night, no water in fire.
- Combustible cladding replaced, exposure analysis not updated.
Conclusion
Exposure protection is an overlooked dimension of building safety. Your building may be a perfect compartment, but a neighbor's fire still threatens you. NFPA 80A analysis + external sprinkler or fire wall: the fundamental method for protecting the urban fabric.

External sprinkler design in SprinkCalc
Deluge façade calc, radiant heat analysis, NFPA 80A separation evaluation.
Learn MoreCore references: NFPA 80A, NFPA 13 Ch. 18, NFPA 30. Original NFPA post: NFPA Today - Exposure Fires.