Fire compartmentalization contains fire to a zone. But every pipe, cable tray, or HVAC duct that penetrates a wall or floor punches a hole in the barrier. Firestop is the family of products and systems that restores fire resistance at those openings. NFPA 285, UL 1479, ASTM E814, and the IBC define testing and application rules. This is a field-application guide.
Why Firestop Is Mandatory
Fire and smoke travel with pressure and temperature gradients. A small hole in a 2-hour concrete wall can drop its fire rating to zero. UL-listed firestop systems restore that rating.
- Pipe penetrations: metallic, plastic, combined
- Cable bundles: power, data, fiber optic
- HVAC ducts: rectangular and round
- Structural gaps: expansion joints, construction gaps
Firestop Product Types
- Intumescent wrap strip: Around PVC pipe; swells in fire, crushes and seals the pipe opening.
- Firestop sealant: Small cable/pipe penetrations; foams in fire.
- Pillow: Cable bundles; removable and reusable.
- Board/block: Large openings; cut-to-fit solid panel.
- Fire damper: HVAC ducts; closes on detection signal.
UL Listing and Testing
In the US, firestop products are tested per UL 1479 or ASTM E814. Each UL listing specifies:
- Penetrant type (metallic pipe, plastic pipe, cable, etc.)
- Maximum opening size
- Wall/floor type and thickness
- Fire rating (1-hour, 2-hour, 4-hour)
- Annular space size
The installation is only valid if the exact listed product is used with the exact listed detail.
NFPA 285: Composite Wall Tests
NFPA 285 is a separate test protocol for façade systems with combustible cladding (EIFS, PIR foam). It tests horizontal fire spread between floors in high-rise buildings.
- Full-scale test minimum two stories tall
- Flame must not spread floor-to-floor
- NFPA 285-compliant system + penetration must be tested together
Field Installation Steps
- Measure opening — is annular gap within UL listing limits?
- Install backer rod — saves material in deep openings
- Apply UL-listed sealant — follow depth/width instructions
- Intumescent wrap strip (PVC pipe): 2 cm overlap each side
- Cure time — monitor humidity and temperature
- Photograph — commissioning documentation
Situation in Turkey
Turkey's BYKHY mandates firestop; field execution lags due to limited inspection. Most common gap: no intumescent wrap on PVC pipe penetrations. In fire, PVC melts, gap opens, fire crosses compartments.
Common Mistakes
- Non-UL-listed product: Local product + improvised detail = outside tested system.
- Annular gap too large: Exceeds UL limit → system invalid.
- Missing wrap strip: Sealant is enough for metal pipe, not for plastic.
- Removed and not reinstalled: Cable replaced, pillow not put back.
- Single-side installation: Must be applied from both sides.
Conclusion
Firestop is invisible but vital. Maintaining compartment integrity matters as much as sprinklers. UL-listed correct product + correct installation + documentation — without this triad, a building's fire rating exists only on paper.

Firestop checklist in MEP Calc
Penetrant type and UL listing reference, annular gap calc, field installation schedule.
View on App StoreCore references: NFPA 285, UL 1479, ASTM E814, IBC Chapter 7. Original NFPA post: NFPA Today - Firestopping 101.