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<br />(f)fhe travel time to a fire within the City is <br />impeded by the following conditions, unique <br />to Redwood City: <br /> <br />(1) Railroad tracks divide the City into three <br />(3) sections, and response requiring crossing <br />of these tracks faces potential delay for <br />emergency vehicles. The heavily populated <br />northern postion of the City is without an <br />overcrossing; <br /> <br />(2) There is an absence of parallel emergency <br />response routes to Highway 101 or El Camino <br />Real and an absence of adequate north/south <br />emergency response routes west of the railroad <br />tracks, impeding access to a heavily populated <br />section of the City; <br /> <br />(3) A growing community of single family and multi- <br />family dwellings presently exists on the <br />easterly side of Highway 101, which is itself <br />a potential physical barrier to response to <br />a fire. <br /> <br />(g) that, on the basis of an analysis per:ormed by <br />Mr. Warren Kimball, a noted Fire Service Specialist, <br />two (2) to four (4) gallons of water per minute <br />are required to be applied to extinguish fire in <br />each 100 cubic feet of a building involved in a <br />fire. On that basis, it would require at least <br />2,250 gallons per minute be applied for extinguish- <br />ment of a fire totally involving a 7,500 square foot <br />building. Accepted Fire Department good practice <br />would require additional"manpower and waterflow if <br />area separation walls, used to circumvent the 7500 <br />square foot requirement, were present. The City <br />Fire Department, with multiple alarm response <br />involving on-duty personnel and present equipment <br />is capable of supplying approximately 1,000 gallons <br />of water per minute. <br /> <br />(h) Since an automatic monitored sprinkler system is <br />designed to suppr8ss or contain fire, and to <br />automatically alert the Fire Department of the <br />r:;enacing presence of a fire the existence of such <br />a system will increase the likelihood that a building <br />on fire will not be totally involved with fire by <br />the time the Fire Department responds, and that the <br />fire will be controlled to a level consistent with <br />fire fighting resources provided by the City of <br />Redwood City. <br /> <br />(i) The requirements of the aforesaid local amendment <br />fulfill the City's desire to minimize its fire <br />fighting and fire prevention costs since the City <br />cannot afford to pay for increased levels of fire <br />fighting which would be the result of the application <br />of normal uniform fire code and building code require- <br />ments. <br />