San Diego has more than 200 high-rise buildings, and every one of them is subject to fire alarm requirements that go well beyond what a standard commercial property faces. The San Diego Fire-Rescue Department conducts annual inspections on all high-rise buildings, and the systems inside these buildings must meet a higher standard of performance, redundancy, and integration.
If you own or manage a high-rise in San Diego, your fire alarm system is not just a code requirement. It is the primary life safety system for every occupant above the reach of fire department ladders.
What Makes High-Rise Fire Alarm Requirements Different
The California Fire Code defines a high-rise building as any structure where the highest occupied floor is more than 75 feet above the lowest level of fire department vehicle access. At that height, evacuation becomes more complex, fire department access is limited, and the fire alarm system takes on a central role in emergency management.
High-rise fire alarm systems in San Diego must include several features that are not required in standard commercial buildings. Voice evacuation systems are mandatory so that occupants receive spoken instructions rather than just a generic horn tone. This allows for phased evacuation, where the floors closest to the fire are evacuated first while other floors shelter in place until directed to move.
A fire command center is required, typically located in the main lobby, where the fire department can take control of building systems during an emergency. The fire alarm control panel, building communication systems, elevator controls, HVAC overrides, and stairwell pressurization controls must all be accessible from this single location.
Smoke control systems are required to prevent smoke from spreading through stairwells and elevator shafts. The fire alarm system must be integrated with these smoke control systems to activate them automatically upon detection.
Two-way communication systems must be installed in stairwells, elevators, and areas of refuge so that occupants can communicate with the fire command center during an emergency.
These requirements are detailed in NFPA 72, the California Fire Code, and San Diego’s local amendments. A fire alarm contractor working on high-rise projects must be thoroughly familiar with all three.
The Unique Challenges of High-Rise Fire Alarm Design
Designing a fire alarm system for a high-rise is fundamentally different from designing one for a single-story commercial building. The vertical nature of the structure creates challenges with wiring distances, signal timing, and device coordination across dozens of floors.
Addressable fire alarm systems are the standard for high-rise applications because they allow the control panel to identify the exact device and location of an alarm activation. In a 30-story building, knowing that the alarm came from a specific smoke detector on the 17th floor rather than just “somewhere in Zone 4” is the difference between a targeted response and confusion.
The system must also handle a large number of devices without exceeding loop capacity or creating communication delays. This requires careful system design and engineering that accounts for the building’s current configuration and anticipated future changes.
Power supply requirements are stricter for high-rise systems. NFPA 72 requires that fire alarm systems operate on backup power for 24 hours in standby mode and then an additional 5 minutes in full alarm mode. For high-rise systems with voice evacuation, that alarm mode requirement extends to 60 minutes. Battery calculations and generator integration must be designed to meet these extended requirements.
Annual Inspections Are Not Optional
The City of San Diego requires annual fire alarm inspections for all high-rise buildings, and these inspections are among the most thorough in the city’s program. The fire department’s Community Risk Reduction Division dedicates specific resources to the high-rise inspection program because of the elevated risk these buildings represent.
During a high-rise inspection, every component of the fire alarm system is tested, including all detection devices, notification appliances, voice evacuation speakers, two-way communication stations, elevator recall sequences, HVAC shutdown sequences, and smoke control integration.
All test reports must be submitted through The Compliance Engine, and the fire department cross-references these reports with their own inspection findings. If your contractor’s testing report does not align with what the fire marshal observes during the department inspection, expect follow-up questions and potential violations.
Keeping Your High-Rise Compliant
High-rise fire alarm compliance requires more than just passing the annual inspection. It requires a proactive maintenance and inspection program that keeps the system in peak condition year-round.
Smoke detector sensitivity testing must be performed within the first year of installation and every other year after that. Battery load tests must verify that backup power meets the extended requirements for voice evacuation systems. Device inventory records must be accurate and current.
For older high-rise buildings in San Diego with fire alarm systems that were installed under previous code editions, a system evaluation may reveal that certain components no longer meet current requirements. Upgrading an existing high-rise fire alarm system is a complex project, but it is far better to plan and execute an upgrade on your timeline than to be forced into one by a failed inspection.
If you manage a high-rise in San Diego and want to confirm your fire alarm system meets current code requirements, schedule a consultation with a contractor who has direct experience with high-rise fire alarm design, installation, and inspection.






Commercial Property ManagerSan Diego, CA