Emergency lighting is essential for safety in commercial buildings in addition to some residential blocks. Whether you manage an office building, a block of apartments, a retail unit or a leisure facility, you should have working emergency lighting to help meet the requirements set out in BS 5266:2016, which stipulates the need for buildings to have adequate illumination when mains power fails.
Other regulations in the UK also cover the provision of emergency lighting, including:
With so much legislation and regulations covering emergency lighting, below we summarise a guide on how to test your emergency lighting.
Not only will this help you to meet your legal obligations, but it will also ensure that anyone in your building is kept safe if your system is fully operational. Emergency lighting provides illumination should you experience a power failure or an emergency, such as a fire, within your building.
Here are four things that should be checked in relation to emergency lighting:
There should be a monthly test of your emergency lighting carried out by the responsible person for your building. This is usually a short test to ensure that your emergency lighting works, making note of any units not working or those that require cleaning and maintenance.
Annual emergency lighting tests need to be carried out by a professional technician. This will involve testing your system for the full duration, usually three hours and is commonly paired with testing your fire alarm.
Monthly checks of your emergency lighting should be carried out by the responsible person, following these steps:
If you notice any issues with your system, you should call in a professional technician to diagnose and remedy the situation as soon as possible to ensure that you are covered.
Because your emergency lighting should be constantly charging to keep a full, 3-hour charge for an emergency, you may opt to conduct a test at the end of the working day. This will ensure that the charge is only depleted when people are out of the building, giving the lights time to recharge overnight.
If your business operates both day and night, hotels are a good example of this, then we recommend carrying out your emergency lighting test in the morning, ensuring that if an emergency does occur there are more natural daylight hours to help in an emergency should the charge be depleted.