Renaissance GroupA Super Structures company
Lessons

Fire Safety & Evacuation

Fire Safety & Evacuation
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Fire Safety & Evacuation

Welcome

Hello, and welcome. This is Super Structures General Contractors — a national general contractor headquartered in Powhatan, Virginia — here to help you and your clients build something that lasts. We're glad you're with us, and we look forward to connecting with you.

Let's dig into Fire Safety & Evacuation. If you remember one thing, make it this: Prevent fires (control hot work), know your extinguishers (PASS) — but only fight small fires; otherwise evacuate and call 911. Stick with me — by the end, this just clicks.

Sites burn — fuel, hot work, temp wiring. Know how to fight small, and when to run.

Construction sites have plenty of fire risk — fuel, hot work, and electrical.

Prevent

Respond

Going Deeper (Intermediate)

Construction sites are fire-prone (fuels, hot work, temporary wiring, combustible debris). The basics:

Advanced / Pro-Level

The programs that prevent jobsite fires:

Practice Challenge

A welder will cut steel next to a wood-framed wall. List two hot-work requirements before the first spark. (Answer: get a hot work permit and clear/shield combustibles within 35 ft with an extinguisher on hand; post a fire watch during the work and for ≥30 minutes after.)

In Practice

A small trash fire might be knocked out with an extinguisher (PASS) — but it's already spreading to stacked materials. The right call now is to get out and call 911. Only fight small, contained fires.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

From the Field

A personal word from a builder who's been there:

Know where the extinguishers and exits are before you need them, and remember PASS — pull, aim, squeeze, sweep — for a small fire with your back to the door. But if it's spreading or between you and the exit, drop it and get out. No building is worth your life; that's not even a close call.

Takeaway: Prevent fires (control hot work), know your extinguishers (PASS) — but only fight small fires; otherwise evacuate and call 911.

⚠️ Awareness only — NOT a substitute for hands-on certification. Get certified in First Aid/CPR/AED through the American Red Cross or American Heart Association, and call 911 in any real emergency.

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