Why Fire Rating Is Non-Negotiable
Every interior cladding material installed in a commercial or hospitality building must carry a fire classification. In Europe and the Middle East, the governing standard is EN 13501-1 — the harmonised European system that replaced the patchwork of national standards. It classifies materials based on how they react to fire: whether they contribute fuel, produce smoke, or generate burning droplets.
For architects specifying wall panels in hotels, restaurants, cultural institutions, and high-traffic public spaces, the fire class isn't just a line item. It determines whether your specification will pass through building control, whether your insurer will underwrite the project, and — in the context of hospitality PIP programmes — whether the brand will approve the materials at all.
The Classification System
EN 13501-1 assigns materials to one of seven classes based on a battery of tests including small flame attack (EN ISO 11925-2), the Single Burning Item test (EN 13823), and a non-combustibility furnace test (EN ISO 1182) for the highest classifications. The classes range from A1 at the top — a material that is entirely non-combustible — down to F, which indicates no performance has been determined.
Classes B through D carry two additional suffixes. The s-suffix rates smoke production (s1 = minimal, s2 = moderate, s3 = high). The d-suffix rates flaming droplets (d0 = none, d1 = limited, d2 = unrestricted). So a material classified B-s1,d0 has limited combustibility, minimal smoke, and no flaming droplets.
| Class | Meaning | Typical Materials | Hospitality Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | Non-combustible. No organic content, no flame contribution whatsoever. | Natural stone, mineral wool, alpha gypsum, glass, ceramics | Required for escape routes, high-rise cores, and many brand standards |
| A2 | Very limited combustibility. Minimal organic binder permitted (<1% flame contribution). | Fibre-cement board, stone-wool panels, some GRC | Accepted for most interior specifications alongside A1 |
| B-s1,d0 | Limited combustibility. Low flame spread, minimal smoke, no flaming droplets. | Modified PU composites, phenolic resin panels, some HPL | Suitable for general interior areas; may not meet escape route requirements |
| C / D | Moderate to high combustibility. Greater flame spread and smoke production. | Timber, standard MDF, many GRP panels, untreated foam | Restricted use. Typically excluded from hotel brand specifications |
How This Applies to Relief Panels
Architectural relief panels present a specific challenge: they have three-dimensional surfaces that increase the effective surface area exposed to flame. A 600×600 mm relief panel with deep sculpting may have 30–40% more exposed surface than a flat panel of the same footprint. This means the fire behaviour of the base material matters even more — there is nowhere to hide poor performance behind a flat surface.
Materials that are inherently non-combustible — such as alpha gypsum — achieve their fire rating through chemistry, not additives. There are no flame retardant chemicals to degrade over time, no intumescent coatings to maintain, and no risk of a reformulated version losing its certification. The fire performance is permanent and immutable.
Inherent A1 (alpha gypsum, stone, ceramics) means the material itself cannot burn — the rating is derived from composition, not treatment. Achieved fire class (flame-retardant treated composites) means a combustible base material has been modified to slow flame spread. The distinction matters for long-term performance, insurance, and brand approval.
What to Specify in Your Tender Documents
When writing a specification clause for decorative wall panels, include the fire classification explicitly. Stating "panels shall be non-combustible" is insufficient — it doesn't reference the standard or the testing regime. A robust specification clause should reference EN 13501-1 by name, specify the required class (e.g. "minimum A2-s1,d0" or "A1"), and require the manufacturer to provide a valid test report or Declaration of Performance (DoP) issued under the Construction Products Regulation.
For hospitality projects, cross-reference the hotel brand's design standard manual. Most international hotel operators (Marriott, Hilton, IHG, Accor) maintain internal material requirements that may exceed local building code — particularly for escape corridors, lobby areas, and back-of-house routes.