City wants sprinklers in new homes
In less than four minutes, the hot flames leapt and rolled up the walls of the box meant to look like a room that sat in the parking lot of Prince Albert’s City Hall.
It was furnished with a chair, small table and toys, and it and a near identical one outfitted with a home sprinkler system were both set on fire as part of the demonstration put on by the Prince Albert Fire Department. It was an exercise meant to show onlookers the difference between what happens in a structure that is equipped with sprinklers and one that is not.
The aim was also to promote the installation of home sprinkler systems in new developments, said Deputy Fire Chief Corey Rodgers, ahead of the demonstration.
The sprinkler systems are meant not so much to extinguish the fire, but to prevent its spread. Once the fire spreads, it can cause enough damage to the building to make it structurally unsound, and consequently, unsafe for firefighters entering the building. But with the flames held at bay, the working system may be able to keep the structure sound for a longer period time – enough time for the firefighters to arrive.


