Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 49— - FIRE PREVENTION AND CONTROL › § 2227
Federal buildings and federally supported housing must have automatic sprinklers or another system that offers the same level of fire safety in many cases. Office buildings that are 6 or more stories tall must have sprinklers when built or bought with Federal money. Other office buildings must at least have sprinklers in the hazardous parts of the building. If the government leases space, a whole building must have sprinklers when some federal space is on the sixth floor or higher and the federal space totals at least 35,000 square feet, unless the building was finished before October 26, 1992 and the agency certifies no suitable building with sprinklers is available at an affordable cost. Renovations, new leases after renovations, and rebuilds also must add sprinklers or equal protection under the same height and space rules. For housing, multifamily buildings bought or rebuilt after October 26, 1992 must have sprinklers and hard-wired smoke detectors before people move in. New multifamily buildings of 4 or more stories that get housing assistance must have sprinklers and hard-wired detectors. After 180 days from October 26, 1992, housing money can only be used for units that have hard-wired or battery smoke detectors; battery detectors may be used when wiring is inadequate or the building is planned for demolition. Some older ownerships and short-term leases are exempt. Definitions (one line each): affordable cost — lease cost no more than 10% higher than similar unprotected space; automatic sprinkler system — a supervised sprinkler piping system meeting NFPA standards and required alarms; equivalent level of safety — an alternate fire design judged equal or better; Federal employee office building — an office with more than 25 full-time Federal workers; housing assistance — Federal help for housing by grants, loans, guarantees, etc., with some program exceptions; hazardous areas — areas named as hazardous in the Life Safety Code; multifamily property — more than 2 units for Federal employee housing, more than 4 units otherwise; prefire plan — a firefighting plan for a building; rebuilding — repairs equaling 70% or more of replacement cost (land excluded); renovated — repairs equaling 50% or more of current building value (land excluded); smoke detectors — alarm devices meeting NFPA standards; United States — the States. The General Services Administrator must define “equivalent level of safety” within 2 years after October 26, 1992 using national codes. States may set stricter rules. Agencies must invite local fire authorities to prepare and review prefire plans every two years. GSA and other agencies must report to Congress on these programs on the timetables set in the law. NIST must study combined fire systems and report within 30 months after October 26, 1992, with 25% of study costs from non-Federal sources and up to $750,000 in Federal funds. Urban space planning should still favor central business areas.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 2227
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73