Green Builder Media

New Ebook Explores the Case for Residential Fire Sprinklers

Written by Cati O'Keefe | May 20, 2026 5:13:31 PM

Green Builder Media’s latest free download examines the data, economics, myths, and real-world outcomes shaping the conversation around residential fire sprinklers.

Residential fire sprinklers have long been one of the housing industry’s most debated topics. Critics point to upfront costs. Advocates point to life safety. But what happens when the conversation shifts from assumptions to actual outcomes?

That question is at the center of The Case for Residential Fire Sprinklers, a new free ebook from Green Builder Media, sponsored by the Home Fire Sprinkler Coalition (HFSC).

The ebook examines decades of real-world fire data, cost-benefit analysis, and lessons from Scottsdale, Arizona, where a residential sprinkler requirement has been in place for more than 40 years. The results are difficult to ignore: reduced fire losses, lower property damage, and measurable life-saving outcomes.

But the report goes beyond statistics.

Modern homes burn differently than homes built decades ago. Open floor plans, tighter building envelopes, synthetic furnishings, engineered materials, and lithium-ion batteries have fundamentally changed fire behavior—accelerating flashover times and reducing escape windows.

The Case for Residential Fire Sprinklers explores how sprinkler systems respond to these evolving risks, while also addressing some of the industry’s most persistent misconceptions around accidental activation, cost, and water damage.

Readers will also gain insight into how some communities have used sprinkler adoption to unlock broader development benefits, including infrastructure efficiencies and planning flexibility.

Whether you’re a builder, policymaker, architect, developer, fire professional, or homeowner interested in housing resilience and life safety, this ebook offers a timely look at a conversation that is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.

Download your free copy of The Case for Residential Fire Sprinklers today