2 min read
Smart Loss Control Techniques to Prevent Electrical Fires
Your home should be a safe haven, but unfortunately, fires pose a significant risk. While cooking and heating are the primary causes of residential...
As temperatures in Johnson City finally begin to climb after a bitter cold snap, property managers and building owners across East Tennessee are breathing a collective sigh of relief. The sun is out, the snow is melting, and the immediate threat of "frozen pipes" seems to have passed.
However, as any seasoned expert in multi-family property management will tell you, the thaw-out period is often more dangerous for your infrastructure than the freeze itself. This is the "deceptive window" where most catastrophic water damage occurs.
If you manage apartment complexes or commercial assets, you might be asking: “Should I shut off the water to the fire sprinkler rooms during the thaw just in case there’s a frozen line hiding in the attic or walls?”
It’s a logical question rooted in the desire to prevent property damage, but getting the answer wrong could lead to severe legal trouble, insurance denials, or—in the worst-case scenario—a life-safety catastrophe. Here is the expanded expert guidance you need to navigate the next 48 hours safely and legally.
The short answer is no. You should not proactively shut off your fire sprinkler system unless you have confirmed an active leak or a structural breach.
According to the International Fire Code (IFC) and local standards enforced by the Johnson City Fire Department (JCFD), fire sprinkler systems must remain operational at all times while a building is occupied. Proactively shutting down a system "just in case" is classified as an unauthorized impairment.
If a fire were to occur while the system was intentionally disabled without following proper impairment protocols:
To manage this risk, you must understand why pipes wait until the thaw to leak. During a deep freeze, ice acts as its own high-pressure plug. You might have a split pipe in an attic or a wall right now and not even know it because the solid ice is holding back the water.
The damage actually happens via two primary mechanisms:
Instead of shutting the system down, you should transition your maintenance team into a state of High Vigilance.
NFPA 25 and local codes require that all portions of a wet sprinkler system be maintained at a minimum of 40°F.
Don't wait for a tenant to call or a ceiling to collapse. During the first 48 hours of a thaw, your maintenance team should be on a constant rotation.
If you suspect a line is frozen in a concealed space (like a soffit or an unheated attic), don't guess.
If you do find a leak, you must act with precision. You cannot simply "turn it off and go to lunch." You must follow the Impairment Coordinator steps:
Your fire sprinkler system is a life-safety device designed to protect your residents' lives. While the fear of water damage is understandable—and the costs can be high—the risk of an unprotected fire in a multi-family building is a liability no property manager should ever take.
Stay the course. Keep the water on, keep the heat up, and keep your team on the ground. If you have any doubt about the integrity of your system as the temperatures rise, contact a licensed Tennessee fire sprinkler contractor for a "dry-run" inspection. It is far cheaper to pay for a service call than it is to remediate a flood or defend a code violation.
Need help with emergency protocols or Fire Watch forms?
Stay connected with our blog for more local Johnson City property management tips, compliance updates, and seasonal maintenance checklists.
Monitor these risks as temperatures rise.
🚨 Leak Detected?
Call JCFD: (423) 434-6088
2 min read
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