BETHESDA, MD – July 26, 2011 — Fire protection engineering is a small field, with approximately 10,000 practitioners worldwide. The small number of practitioners contrasts with the big responsibility shouldered by fire protection engineers – designing ways to protect people and property from fire.
During his 60+ years as a fire protection engineer, Bud Nelson changed the practice of fire protection engineering in a positive and significant way.
Bud Nelson, born in Chicago, Illinois on Feb. 9, 1929, died in Fairfax, VA on Thursday, July 21 due to complications arising from a fall. Nelson attended what is now the Illinois Institute of Technology, beginning in 1946. Upon graduation four years later, he was drafted by the U.S. Army. He served at Aberdeen Proving Ground, where he co-founded the “Scientific and Professional
Harold E. “Bud” Nelson, pioneering fire protection engineer, dies at 82
Personnel of Aberdeen Proving Ground Society.”
Following his Army service, Nelson accepted a position with the E.I. Dupont Co. While at DuPont, he observed that requirements for fire safety in buildings focused on individual building components – such as beams, columns, partitions or finish materials – without regard for how fires would start or grow or how those fires would impact the building, its contents or its occupants.
This observation started what would become a lifetime quest to improve fire safety design in buildings through an improved understanding of fire science. The approach that he advocated is presently known as “performance-based design.”
After working for Dupont, Nelson accepted a civilian position with the U.S. Navy in what is now known as the Naval Facilities Engineering Command.
Shortly thereafter, Mr. Nelson moved to the General Services Administration, the agency of the U.S. government that manages real property used by the government, where he was the chief of the accident and fire protection division. While at the General Services Administration, Nelson chaired the committees of the Federal Fire Council on design and on protection of records.
Following a fire in a computer room in a basement of the pentagon in 1959, Nelson was tasked with investigating the causes and contributing factors of the fire. The fire burned 4,000 square feet of the building and caused $30 million in damage. The results of his investigation led to National Fire Protection Association standard number 75, “Standard for the Protection of Information Technology Equipment.“
Concern in the late 1960s about fire safety in high-rise buildings turned Nelson’s attention to that subject. He called a series of conferences that brought together some of the nation’s leading fire safety experts to develop a strategy for ensuring that high-rise buildings were sufficiently safe from fire. He once again advocated developing fire safety designs based on how fire, the building and its occupants would interact. Mr. Nelson also pioneered the use of smoke control in high-rise buildings and the use of voice notification with fire alarms – two fire safety measures that are commonly used today.
Nelson’s work on fire safety design in high-rise buildings lead him to develop the “goal-oriented systems approach” to fire safety design. The “goal-oriented systems approach” evaluated the contributions of individual fire safety systems – such as fire suppression, fire detection, or fire compartmentation – to the overall level of fire safety in a building. Ultimately, the results of this work lead to the development of National Fire Protection Association guide number 550 – “Guide to the Fire Safety Concepts Tree.” His goal-oriented systems approach” was used as the design methodology in the Henry M. Jackson Federal Building in Seattle and the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum.
Nelson later worked for what is now the National Institute of Standards and Technology in the field of fire research. Unease with fire safety in hospitals lead him to develop the “fire safety evaluation system,” a methodology where points were awarded based on the presence, absence and performance of individual fire safety systems. The sum of the points for a hospital were used to judge the overall level of fire safety. Nelson’s “fire safety evaluation system” was later published as National Fire Protection Association guide number 101A – “Guide on Alternative Approaches to Life Safety.”
While at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Nelson was an early developer of computer-based fire simulation tools. He developed one of the first fire simulation programs – called “FIREFORM” – which was a program that would solve simple algebraic equations used to predict the effects of a fire. During this time he also directed two of his subordinates – Drs. Leonard Cooper and David Evans – to develop two pioneering fire simulation tools. “Available Safe Egress Time,” a program used to determine the rate at which smoke would fill a compartment, was developed by Cooper, while “Detector Activation – Quasi Steady”, a program to predict the actuation of thermally-activated fire detectors, was developed by Evans.
Also while at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Mr. Nelson was asked to investigate the fire at the Dupont Plaza hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The fire, which occurred on new year’s eve in 1986, killed 98 people. As part of the fire investigation, Nelson was one of the first people to use fire simulation tools to recreate the fire for the purpose of understanding the causes and contributing factors.
Nelson left the National Institute of Standards and Technology to work for Hughes Associates, a fire protection consulting firm. He also investigated the fire-related contributing factors that lead to the collapse of the buildings at the World Trade Center site on September 11, 2001.
He received the National Engineering Award from the American Association of Engineering Societies for “inspired leadership and devotion to the improvements of fire protection engineering and the reduction of building fire threats to lives and property.” He is the first recipient of the Society of Fire Protection Engineers’ Harold E. Nelson Service Award.
About Society of Fire Protection Engineers
Organized in 1950, the Society of Fire Protection Engineers (SFPE) is the professional organization that represents engineers engaged in fire protection worldwide. Through its membership of over 5,000 professionals and 65 international chapters, SFPE advances the science and practice of fire protection engineering while maintaining a high ethical standard. SFPE and its members serve to make the world a safer place by reducing the burden of unwanted fire through the application of science and technology. To become a member, go to www.sfpe.org.
Firefighters pulled four dogs from a smoldering Fort Lauderdale home that was in flames just minutes earlier Thursday morning, according to the department.