While Vanderbilt University students who live on campus are protected by fire prevention, detection, and suppression systems, students who live off-campus may not be as well protected.
Please consider the following fire safety guidelines when selecting your off-campus residence, and remember that fire safety is everyone’s responsibility. In an apartment, where many homes are clustered into a single building, what each resident does or doesn’t do can have a profound effect on the safety of all building occupants.
Early warning of a fire can save your life.
When apartments do not have independent exits, the fire alarm system
should provide warning about fire in an adjoining unit. The buildings
should at least be equipped with manual alarms in or near major building
exits. Be sure to read through the VU Fire Safety Fact Sheets on Cooking Safety and Electrical Safety.
Please consider avoiding the use of candles or incense, and do not smoke in your apartment, as is the policy for Vanderbilt Residence Halls. However, if you do plan to use any of those items, the following fact sheets may help you do so safely: Candle Safety Rules and Careless Smoking - Life Saving Tips.
If you will be using a Portable Space Heater, read about Electric Space Heater Safety. Never use a portable kerosene heater inside your home.
If your home has Gas heat or appliances, learn about Carbon Monoxide
safety in
Exposing an Invisible Killer: The Dangers of Carbon Monoxide.
Look for emergency lighting in the common exit
paths for hallways and stairwells. If you have disabilities that could hinder safe evacuation, please review the information provided by the United States Fire Administration concerning Fire Safety for People with Disabilities .
If you will be living in a high-rise apartment building read
Danger
Above, A factsheet for High-Rise Fire Safety.
Even if everyone in your building is as careful about fire safes as possible, there is still
the chance you or a neighbor might have a fire in your apartment. If you
have a small fire in your unit you may choose to attempt to extinguish it. To do
so requires access to a fire extinguisher no more than 75 feet away and knowledge
of how to use it. If you have to walk more than that from the site of a
fire to get an extinguisher, by the time you return the fire will likely
be too big to extinguish it safely. For this reason, it is preferable to
have an ABC Multipurpose Dry Chemical extinguisher
in each apartment. For multistory apartment units, an extinguisher on
each level is
advisable.
Sprinklers save lives by slowing the spread of smoke and fire. If your apartment building is over three stories tall, or if it is a wood frame multi-tenant building of any height, the building complex should be protected with automatic water sprinklers.
Please read the VU Fire Safety Fact Sheets on
Fire
Extinguishers and Sprinklers for more information
about fire suppression.