Fire Detection System Install SWMS
Install of fire detection systems β smoke detectors, heat detectors, beam detectors, aspirating smoke detection. Includes cable run in ceiling void, detector mounting, panel programming, commissioning.
SWMS variants reference your stateβs WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.
Installing fire detection systems across commercial, industrial and institutional buildings involves running detection cabling through ceiling voids, mounting smoke, heat, beam and aspirating smoke detectors, terminating into fire indicator panels (FIPs), and conducting commissioning tests under AS 1670.1. The work routinely combines elevated platform access above 2 metres, restricted ceiling-void entry that frequently meets the AS 2865 definition of a confined space, and live or de-energised low-voltage electrical termination β placing the activity squarely within Schedule 1 of WHS Regulation 2025 as High Risk Construction Work. A documented Safe Work Method Statement is mandatory before work commences and must be available on site for the duration of the task, signed by every worker, and reviewed when conditions change. This SWMS captures the realistic hazards a fire detection installer faces between rough-in and witness testing, and aligns controls with AS 1670.1, AS/NZS 3000, AS/NZS 1891 and the Managing the Risk of Falls Code of Practice.
Hazards identified
7 hazards covered, sorted by priority.
Serious head, spinal or pelvic injury, potential fatality, and notifiable incident under WHS Act s38
Asphyxiation, heat stress, entrapment, and prosecution for unpermitted confined space entry under WHS Reg s67
Electric shock, cardiac arrest, arc flash burns, and breach of AS/NZS 3000 isolation requirements
Respiratory irritation, dermatitis, long-term sensitisation, and exceedance of SMF workplace exposure standard
Asbestos fibre release, mesothelioma risk decades later, and mandatory licensed removal under WHS Reg Ch 8
Acute lumbar strain, shoulder rotator cuff injury, and chronic musculoskeletal disorder claims
Mass evacuation, brigade callout charges, occupant injury during egress, and AS 1851 commissioning non-compliance
Control measures
Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β substitution β isolation β engineering β administrative β PPE.
- 1Elimination β Schedule detector mounting and cable termination at ground level on a pre-fabricated bracket where building design permits, removing height exposure entirely.
- 2Elimination β Run detection cabling on cable trays installed by others before ceiling close-up to eliminate ceiling-void entry after fit-out.
- 3Substitution β Substitute conventional knee-board ceiling access with scissor lift or boom EWP rated to AS 1418.10 wherever floor loading and access geometry allow.
- 4Substitution β Use pre-terminated factory loop cabling instead of on-site field terminations to reduce live electrical work and ceiling-space dwell time.
- 5Engineering β Isolate and lock out the relevant 240V circuit at the distribution board, test dead with a tested-known-tested multimeter, and apply personal danger tag per AS/NZS 4836.
- 6Engineering β Mechanically ventilate ceiling voids exceeding AS 2865 confined space criteria, monitor O2/LEL/CO continuously, and post a trained standby person with rescue retrieval line.
- 7Administrative β Hold a documented pre-start briefing using this SWMS, confirm asbestos register review for buildings pre-1990, and issue confined space and working-at-height permits before access.
- 8Administrative β Notify building occupants and isolate the fire indicator panel to brigade per AS 1851 prior to any commissioning that could trigger occupant warning system activation.
- 9PPE β Wear a full-body harness with twin shock-absorbing lanyards anchored to a rated point per AS/NZS 1891.1 when working from EWP basket or near unprotected edges.
- 10PPE β Use P2 respiratory protection per AS/NZS 1716, cut-resistant gloves, safety eyewear, and disposable coveralls during ceiling-void work involving SMF insulation or dust.
Applicable Codes of Practice
Prescribes detector spacing, cable segregation, FIP location and commissioning test regime that the SWMS task sequence must follow.
Mandates isolation, testing for de-energisation, and segregation of ELV detection cabling from LV mains during ceiling-void cable runs and panel termination.
Governs harness selection, anchor rating and rescue planning when installing detectors from EWPs or near ceiling edges above 2 metres.
Triggers WHS Reg s78 duty to apply the hierarchy of fall control before any ladder, EWP or void access is authorised.
High-Risk Construction Work triggered
Ceiling-level detector mounting, beam detector alignment and FIP installation routinely occur from EWPs or step platforms above 2 metres.
Ceiling voids with restricted access, limited natural ventilation and dust accumulation regularly meet the AS 2865 confined space definition during cable pulls.
Cable routing and detector mounting occur adjacent to live 240V lighting and power circuits inside ceiling spaces and at the fire indicator panel.
PCBU must prepare, consult workers on, and retain this SWMS for the duration of the work; penalties for non-compliance are substantial and indexed, with the current maximum following the prevailing WHS schedule.
Who this is for
- βLicensed fire detection installers and commissioning technicians
- βFire services subcontractors on commercial fit-outs
- βElectrical contractors cross-trading into detection work
- βPrincipal contractors coordinating fire systems on construction sites
What you receive
- βEditable DOCX template β Microsoft Word compatible
- βState-specific WHS legislation schedule (NSW/VIC/QLD/SA/WA/TAS/NT/ACT)
- βHazard register with risk ratings + hierarchy-of-control mapping
- βWorker sign-on register, pre-start checklist, and incident escalation flow
Worked example
On a five-storey commercial refurbishment, the fire services leading hand opens the pre-start brief at the Level 3 lift lobby with this SWMS printed and the asbestos register confirmed clear for the post-2005 fit-out zone. The crew is installing 42 photoelectric smoke detectors, two beam detectors across the open-plan tenancy, and terminating a new addressable loop into the existing FIP. Workers walk the hazard register: the leading hand flags that the ceiling void on grid line F is below 600 mm clearance and therefore triggers the confined space control β gas monitor, standby person and permit required. Each worker signs on, including the apprentice who is restricted from confined space entry. Two hours in, the EWP operator identifies an unmapped live lighting circuit at grid C7 that was not isolated at the morning lockout. Work stops, the SWMS is reviewed at the basket, the electrician re-isolates and re-tests the circuit, and the change is recorded as a SWMS amendment with all affected workers re-signing. Before commissioning, the supervisor confirms FIP isolation to brigade per the administrative control, notifies the building manager, and runs the witness test. The signed SWMS, permit, and amendment record are filed in the site safety folder and retained for the statutory period as evidence of consultation and active control.
Related legislation
- WHS Act 2011 (model)
- WHS Regulation 2025
- AS 2865 β Confined spaces