DON’T IGNORE THE KNEES…. THE DANGER OF THE KNEE WALL VOID SPACE
Recently, the Harrisburg Bureau of Fire conducted our in-house truck academy for our apprentice firefighters that are completing their first year of service.
This intensive program covers all aspects of truck company operations, as well as aerial apparatus placement, setup, and usage. At the end of the program, successful candidates are then able to be assigned as the second firefighter on a truck company.
We currently have the luxury of having many vacant structures with which to work, which makes the truck academy training very realistic. During the class, we get to look at many of the types of buildings that we have in the city.
For those occupancies that we can enter and operate inside, we’re able to cover building construction and fire behavior in the various construction types.
One of the areas on which we spend time is knee walls and the inherent issues that come along with them. We trained in a 2-1⁄2-story ordinary (Type III) row home and a 2-1⁄2 story wood frame (Type V) row home that both contained significant knee wall construction and voids.
In this series of images from the two different styles of building construction, you can quickly see the availability of fuel and pathways for fire to spread with in the knee wall voids.
The first home in the series of images (the ordinary construction row) will show before and after images from overhaul with no fire conditions. The second part of the series (the wood frame row) shows some of the areas after significant fire damage and overhaul.
There are 25 images related two these buildings and the knee walls within them. Each image will have a caption to explain what we found and how it effects fire ground operations.