Fire safety plans for offices in Ontario.
Multi-tenant floors, after-hours occupancy, and elevator-recall coordination make office plans deceptively nuanced.
Compliance checklist
- Ontario Fire Code Section 2.8.2
- Elevator recall procedures documented
- Warden roster with training records
- After-hours and cleaning-crew procedures
What we handle
What a strong plan looks like for offices.
Tenant coordination
One building-level plan that each tenant can align to — without gaps between floors or after-hours coverage.
Elevator recall & first-responder access
Phase I / Phase II recall procedures, firefighter service keys, and riser-room access worked into the plan.
Warden network
Floor wardens and a chief warden are named, trained, and documented so expectations are clear on a live alarm.
Common questions
How do I coordinate a plan across multiple tenants? What happens if a tenant changes mid-year?
Other building types
We also prepare plans for.
Condominiums
High-rise residential, shared corridors, quarterly drills for 6+ storeys.
Restaurants
Kitchen hood suppression, occupant loads, alcohol-licensing sign-off.
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.
