Azeidk-Group

Fire Pump Room

Ten practical checks for your fire pump room before handover—layout, controller readiness, jockey pump behavior, valve positions, drainage, ventilation, and the documents inspectors commonly request.

What a fire pump room must achieve

A fire pump room is not just equipment installed in a mechanical space. Its job is simple and critical: deliver reliable flow and pressure when a fire demand occurs, under real operating conditions. A pump room should provide:
  • Correct pressure and flow for the system demand
  • Stable operation (no abnormal vibration, leaks, or overheating)
  • Clear controls and alarms for operation and fault conditions
  • Safe access for operators and maintenance
  • A testing method that can be repeated and documented

In many projects, the pump room “looks complete” but fails because key details were missed during installation, settings, or testing preparation.

Pre-handover checks (10 essentials)

Use these checks before any official acceptance test.
They reduce retests and avoid last-minute surprises.

A) Access and working space

  • Clear access around pumps, controllers, valves, gauges
  • Space for maintenance and safe movement

B) Controller readiness

  • Controller installed correctly and protected from moisture
  • Wiring is tidy and secured (no loose connections)
  • Indicators and alarms function (without unresolved faults)

C) Power supply and backup

  • Stable power feed confirmed
  • Any backup requirements are tested (where applicable)
  • Cables and protections are appropriate and secured

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D) Jockey pump behavior

  • Starts and stops correctly to maintain pressure
  • No excessive short-cycling (often signals leakage or wrong settings)

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E) Suction line integrity

  • No visible stress on pipes
  • Proper supports and anchors are installed
  • No leaks at joints, flanges, or valves

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F) Discharge line readiness

  • Discharge routing is correct and supported
  • Gauges installed and readable
  • Isolation valves are in correct positions

G) Test header / flow testing preparation

  • Test header exists and is accessible
  • Safe discharge route is available during testing
  • Team knows where water will discharge and how to control it

H) Drainage and housekeeping

  • Floor drain works and is not blocked
  • No water pooling near electrical equipment
  • Room is clean enough for safe operation and maintenance

I) Ventilation and temperature

  • Ventilation is sufficient for operating heat
  • Room temperature remains within safe operating range
  • No blocked vents or sealed openings that trap heat

J) Valve positions and supervision

  • Critical valves are confirmed open/closed as required
  • Valve position checks are included in routine rounds
  • Any supervisory monitoring is verified (where applicable)

The most common failures during testing

Most failed tests come from a few repeat problems:

  • Wrong settings (jockey pump, controller logic, pressure thresholds)
  • Undetected leaks causing pressure drops and short-cycling
  • Blocked drains leading to water accumulation and unsafe operation
  • Improper pipe supports causing stress and vibration
  • Test header not ready or unsafe discharge arrangement
  • Valves in wrong position after maintenance or modifications
  • Incomplete documentation leading to inspection delays and retests

A simple monthly pump room routine

A practical routine keeps the pump room ready and prevents surprises.

Monthly routine checklist

  • Visual inspection: leaks, vibration signs, unusual noise
  • Gauge check: stable normal pressure readings
  • Controller status check: no unresolved alarms
  • Jockey pump observation: no short cycling
  • Valve position check: confirm critical valves are correct
  • Drainage check: floor drain and housekeeping
  • Record: date, observations, corrective actions (if any)
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Documentation and test records you should keep

Good records reduce disputes and speed up inspections.

Keep:

  • As-built drawings (updated)
  • Pump data sheets and controller details
  • Flow test records and results
  • Pressure readings during test
  • Commissioning checklist and sign-offs
  • Maintenance schedule and service logs
  • Corrective actions history (what was fixed and when)
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Quick final checklist before inspection or handover

Use this before inspection day:

  • Pump room clean and safe for access
  • Controllers show no alarms/faults
  • Jockey pump stable (no short cycling)
  • Suction/discharge lines verified (no leaks, proper supports)
  • Test header accessible and discharge plan confirmed
  • Critical valves verified and recorded
  • Drainage working and no water pooling
  • Documents ready: as-built + test reports + commissioning checklist