LED emergency exit sign with running-man pictogram fitted by CJA Electrical

Emergency lighting installation, annual testing, and remedial work in Gillingham. The brief on most Gillingham jobs is straightforward — bring escape routes up to BS 5266 compliance for an HMO licence renewal, refresh an older system that’s failing duration tests, or fit emergency lighting into a converted-house HMO that never had it. We handle all three.

What Emergency Lighting actually is

The point of emergency lighting is unambiguous: when the mains drops out, occupants can still see the exits clearly enough to leave the building. The system runs from a battery in each fitting, separate from the general lighting circuit, and switches on the moment the mains supply fails. BS 5266 governs where fittings go, how long they need to run, and how the system is tested. In a typical Gillingham HMO conversion, that means around four to eight LED bulkhead units across the shared common parts, plus an exit sign at the final exit door. Specification depends on the building’s geometry and what the fire risk assessment has called for.

When you need Emergency Lighting in Gillingham

Most calls about emergency lighting in Gillingham come from one of three triggers: 1. Medway Council HMO licence renewal — current certificate needed 2. Fire risk assessment has flagged missing or end-of-life fittings 3. New conversion (single house to HMO, commercial to residential) needs a system specified from scratch All three use the same BS 5266 standard. We work to the FRA findings or the licence specification, whichever is the binding document.

Fully labelled domestic consumer unit after EICR testing
Fully labelled domestic consumer unit after EICR testing

Standards and what compliance looks like

The detail BS 5266 cares about: every exit, every stair, every change of direction in a corridor, every corridor junction, every external escape route, and the immediate vicinity of any firefighting equipment (fire extinguishers, fire blankets) needs illumination from the emergency system. For a typical Gillingham 3-storey converted house being run as an HMO, that translates to around 6 fittings — usually four LED bulkheads in corridors and on landings, plus a non-maintained exit sign at the final exit door, plus one fitting near any external escape route. Smaller properties need fewer; larger HMOs proportionally more.

Fittings and where they go

LED is the default. Older fluorescent emergency fittings still in service across Medway buildings have shorter battery lives, higher failure rates, and warmer running temperatures. When we replace fluorescent on a like-for-like basis, the new LED units use a fraction of the standby power, charge faster, and have a meaningfully longer service life before end-of-life replacement. Specification details matter — duration rating, IP rating where fittings sit in damp areas, and the choice between addressable self-testing fittings (useful in larger buildings with central monitoring) versus stand-alone fittings (simpler, lower install cost).

Multi-occupancy meter cupboard with separate consumer units and smart meters
Multi-occupancy meter cupboard with separate consumer units and smart meters

Testing schedule and remedials

The testing regime is two-tier. Monthly function tests are quick — flip the test key, watch the LED illuminate on battery, restore. The duty owner does these themselves and logs them in the logbook on site. The annual test is the substantive one. Each fitting runs on battery for its full duration rating (3 hours for HMO and residential applications), and any fitting that fails to make it the distance gets flagged for battery or fitting replacement. We document the results in the logbook and issue a fresh BS 5266 certificate against the new test date.

Why Gillingham property owners book CJA Electrical

Three reasons most often. Emergency lighting work is done by a City & Guilds 2391 qualified inspector with ten years of working on Medway property — comfortable with HMO common-parts work, fire alarm circuit interfaces, and the kind of remediation jobs where an FRA has flagged something specific. Same-week appointments are typical for Gillingham. Test certificates and logbook updates supplied at the end of each visit. Remedial fittings quoted alongside any failed-test findings so the duty owner has a single document to act on.

How the work runs

Project flow on a typical Gillingham HMO conversion: Pre-quote site visit happens within a couple of working days of the initial call. The quote covers the BS 5266 specification, the fitting count, exit signage, and the certification deliverables. Once instructed, the install runs as a single visit for properties with fewer than ten fittings; two visits for larger blocks of flats. Commissioning, test, certificate, logbook — done by the end of the final visit.

What affects the price

Emergency lighting pricing is per property and reflects fitting count, fitting type (LED bulkhead vs exit sign vs higher-spec self-test addressable), duration rating, and any access constraints. Gillingham properties vary — a small two-storey converted house and a five-storey block of flats are very different jobs. Same-day fixed quote on receipt of the property scope (number of storeys, FRA findings if available, HMO licence detail). No deposit, payment on certificate.

FAQs

What documentation do you supply on completion?

BS 5266 certificate documenting the installation and the test results, plus a logbook for ongoing test records that stays at the property. The certificate is the document Medway Council fire risk assessors and insurers expect to see on inspection. Annual test visits update the logbook and issue a fresh dated certificate.

How long should emergency lights stay on after a power cut?

Depends on the duration rating and the application. 1-hour fittings are the minimum for premises with quick evacuation. 3-hour fittings are required for sleeping accommodation — HMOs, blocks of flats, hotels — because evacuation may be slower. We default to 3-hour LED for residential common-parts work in Gillingham because the cost difference is minimal and the compliance posture is stronger.

Can you fit emergency lighting alongside a new fire alarm system?

Yes. The two systems are separate but related — fire alarm circuits and emergency lighting circuits typically share supply origins, so coordination matters. We do the emergency lighting side and can interface with whatever fire alarm contractor is doing the BS 5839-1 work. For HMOs in Gillingham we often install the emergency lighting as part of the same licence-renewal scope as smoke alarm work — see the smoke alarm installation page for that side.

Will the inspection cause much disruption?

Minimal. The annual full-discharge test runs in the background — fittings switch to battery on the test key, then back to mains 3 hours later. We can schedule the test during a quiet period for the building (early morning, late evening, weekend) to minimise impact on tenants or occupiers. New installs need a single working day for typical Gillingham HMO common parts.

Do you cover Gillingham for both install and ongoing maintenance?

Yes. Our service area covers Medway, Maidstone, Gravesham, Swale, and the wider Medway region. Gillingham is reached from our Rochester base in around 10 minutes. We do new installs, annual maintenance visits, and remedial work on existing systems — all under the same BS 5266 framework and the same standard documentation.

Do I need emergency lighting in my Gillingham HMO?

Almost always, where there are shared common parts (hallways, stairs, landings). The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 requires escape routes to remain lit if the mains fails, and Medway Council typically writes emergency lighting in as an HMO licence condition. Single-occupancy houses don’t usually need it; commercial premises and any building with sleeping accommodation generally do.

What standard does emergency lighting need to meet?

BS 5266-1 is the standard for emergency escape lighting in non-domestic premises and HMO common parts. It defines fitting locations (exits, stair heads, corridor junctions, near firefighting equipment), duration ratings (1-hour minimum, 3-hour required for sleeping accommodation), and the testing schedule. For most Gillingham HMO and block-of-flats common parts, 3-hour non-maintained LED bulkheads are the right answer.

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Frequently asked questions

What documentation do you supply on completion?

BS 5266 certificate documenting the installation and the test results, plus a logbook for ongoing test records that stays at the property. The certificate is the document Medway Council fire risk assessors and insurers expect to see on inspection. Annual test visits update the logbook and issue a fresh dated certificate.

How long should emergency lights stay on after a power cut?

Depends on the duration rating and the application. 1-hour fittings are the minimum for premises with quick evacuation. 3-hour fittings are required for sleeping accommodation — HMOs, blocks of flats, hotels — because evacuation may be slower. We default to 3-hour LED for residential common-parts work in Gillingham because the cost difference is minimal and the compliance posture is stronger.

Can you fit emergency lighting alongside a new fire alarm system?

Yes. The two systems are separate but related — fire alarm circuits and emergency lighting circuits typically share supply origins, so coordination matters. We do the emergency lighting side and can interface with whatever fire alarm contractor is doing the BS 5839-1 work. For HMOs in Gillingham we often install the emergency lighting as part of the same licence-renewal scope as smoke alarm work — see the [smoke alarm installation page](/smoke-alarm-installation/) for that side.

Will the inspection cause much disruption?

Minimal. The annual full-discharge test runs in the background — fittings switch to battery on the test key, then back to mains 3 hours later. We can schedule the test during a quiet period for the building (early morning, late evening, weekend) to minimise impact on tenants or occupiers. New installs need a single working day for typical Gillingham HMO common parts.

Do you cover Gillingham for both install and ongoing maintenance?

Yes. Our service area covers Medway, Maidstone, Gravesham, Swale, and the wider Medway region. Gillingham is reached from our Rochester base in around 10 minutes. We do new installs, annual maintenance visits, and remedial work on existing systems — all under the same BS 5266 framework and the same standard documentation.

Do I need emergency lighting in my Gillingham HMO?

Almost always, where there are shared common parts (hallways, stairs, landings). The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 requires escape routes to remain lit if the mains fails, and Medway Council typically writes emergency lighting in as an HMO licence condition. Single-occupancy houses don't usually need it; commercial premises and any building with sleeping accommodation generally do.

What standard does emergency lighting need to meet?

BS 5266-1 is the standard for emergency escape lighting in non-domestic premises and HMO common parts. It defines fitting locations (exits, stair heads, corridor junctions, near firefighting equipment), duration ratings (1-hour minimum, 3-hour required for sleeping accommodation), and the testing schedule. For most Gillingham HMO and block-of-flats common parts, 3-hour non-maintained LED bulkheads are the right answer.

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