INSTITUTIONAL
Fire Protection for Secure Detention Environments
Fire protection consulting and engineering for correctional facilities, detention centers, and secure institutional buildings where life safety must work in lockstep with security operations.
Correctional Fire Protection Requires a Different Playbook
Detention, correctional, and lockup facilities introduce life safety constraints that most building types never face. Restrained occupants, controlled movement, hardened construction, and heightened arson risk change how egress, compartmentation, detection, and suppression must function—especially when doors are locked and staff-driven movement is part of the emergency plan.
Summit Fire Consulting helps design teams, owners, and contractors develop fire and life safety strategies that support custody operations without compromising protection. We focus on practical, defensible approaches that integrate systems, procedures, and building design so the facility performs as intended during both routine operations and emergency events.
How We Protect Institutional Facilities
Our team includes former government fire protection engineers who served as Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ), providing unique perspective on both sides of the approval process and ensuring designs that pass inspection the first time.
Detention Life Safety & Egress Strategy
Defend-in-Place & Phased Evacuation Planning
Smoke Control & Compartmentation Strategy
Fire Alarm & Security System Integration Review
Performance-Based Design (PBD) / Modeling Support
Alternative Means & Methods (AMMR) Support
Third-Party Reviews & Independent Technical Verification
We Understand Institutional Fire Protection Challenges
- Restrained occupant egress where movement is controlled by staff, doors are secured, and evacuation is not always immediate or simultaneous
- Security and life safety where door hardware, lock automation, and alarm functions must support both custody requirements and emergency performance
- Elevated incendiary risk where motives for intentional ignition can be more common than in typical occupancies, driving different assumptions about detection and response
- Operational dependence where emergency performance relies on staff actions, procedures, and training—not just passive building features
- Compartmentation and smoke movement complexity where phased relocation, smoke zoning, and protected staff routes matter as much as code-minimum exits
- Hardened construction constraints where penetrations, tamper resistance, durability, and maintenance realities affect system selection and detailing
- Renovations and expansions in occupied facilities where construction phasing, temporary egress, and continuity of operations create added risk
- Multi-stakeholder approvals involving owners, operators, facility maintenance, designers, and AHJs with different priorities and decision authority
Secured by Design.
Ready in Practice
Summit supports correctional and secure institutional projects by aligning fire protection design with operational realities. Our work helps teams clarify compliance paths, reduce rework, and deliver life safety strategies that hold up under AHJ review—without undermining custody procedures or facility functionality.
Why Correctional Projects Choose Summit
Correctional facilities can’t rely on generic life safety assumptions. Owners and project teams choose Summit because we understand that detention fire protection is as much about how the building operates as how it’s detailed on a drawing set.
We help teams navigate the “either/or” trap between security and fire safety by developing strategies that integrate compartmentation, smoke control, system interfaces, and emergency procedures. When performance-based approaches are the right fit, we use modeling and clear documentation to support decisions with defensible technical justification—so your design is credible to reviewers and workable for operators.
Built for Secure Operations
Bring experienced fire protection engineers to your detention project—aligned with operations, approvals, and construction realities.