Fire safety plans for condominiums in Ontario.
High-rise residential buildings have strict drill frequency, shared-corridor egress rules, and board-governance realities. Your plan needs to reflect all three.
Compliance checklist
- Ontario Fire Code Section 2.8.2
- Annual and quarterly drill documentation
- Life-safety equipment schematic drawings per floor
- Staff and warden training records
What we handle
What a strong plan looks like for condominiums.
Quarterly drills above six storeys
Buildings exceeding six storeys require drills every three months. Scenarios, documentation, and rotation are written into the plan.
Warden structure
Floor wardens, deputy wardens, chief warden — named, trained, and documented, with annual refreshers.
Visitor & rental suite realities
Transient occupants and short-term rentals are addressed so the plan reflects how the building actually operates.
Common questions
Why does my condo need a new plan after a renovation? How are short-term rentals handled in the plan?
Other building types
We also prepare plans for.
Restaurants
Kitchen hood suppression, occupant loads, alcohol-licensing sign-off.
Offices
Tenant floors, after-hours occupancy, elevator recall, fire wardens.
Warehouses
High-pile storage, racking, sprinkler density, forklift charging areas.
Schools
Board requirements, high-occupancy drills, age-appropriate procedures.
Child care
Ministry licensing, infant evacuation plans, staff-to-child egress ratios.
Hotels & hospitality
Transient occupancy, multilingual guest instructions, brand-standard drills.
Ready when you are
Get a fixed-price quote for your building.
Tell us the building type and address. We reply with a firm price within one business day — no hourly rates, no open-ended scope.
