Fire Sprinkler Inspection · Connecticut

Fire Sprinkler Systems in Connecticut

Titan delivers complete fire sprinkler solutions across Connecticut through trusted, vetted partners — coordinated under a single Titan project number. From wet and dry systems to pre-action and deluge, we manage the inspection schedule, the deficiency reports, and the AHJ paperwork the same way we manage your fire alarm: one accountable point of contact, NFPA 25-compliant, with Connecticut-only focus.

Fire sprinkler head and overhead piping in a Connecticut commercial facility

What We Do for Fire Sprinklers

  • Routine test & inspection (NFPA 25) — quarterly, semi-annual, annual, and 5-year internal intervals, fully documented. We can also train your in-house facility staff on the daily, weekly, and monthly visual checks NFPA 25 assigns to building owners
  • System maintenance & repair — head replacement, valve service, low-air troubleshooting on dry systems
  • New system installation — coordinated through our vetted CT-licensed sprinkler partners under one Titan project number
  • System upgrades & replacement — aging-system replacement, hazard reclassification, occupancy-change retrofits
  • System design — sprinkler design and AHJ submittal coordination, integrated with fire alarm where applicable
  • 24/7 emergency response — for system trips, low-pressure alarms, freeze-related failures
  • Backflow and standpipe testing — scheduled and reported alongside your annual sprinkler inspection
  • Code consulting — for property managers and GCs on NFPA 13, NFPA 25, and CT amendments

Fire Sprinkler System Types We Work With

  • Wet pipe systems — water-filled year-round, the most common and reliable system type for heated occupancies
  • Dry pipe systems — pressurized air or nitrogen in the pipes, required wherever freezing is possible (parking garages, attics, exterior canopies)
  • Pre-action systems — double-interlock for water-sensitive areas like data centers, archives, and museums
  • Deluge systems — open heads with simultaneous discharge, used for high-hazard occupancies
  • Foam-water systems — for flammable-liquid hazards (loading docks, fuel-storage occupancies)
  • Antifreeze loops — testing, listed-fluid replacement, and code-compliant retrofits per current NFPA 13 limits
  • Standpipes & fire pumps — testing, inspection, and certification per NFPA 25

One contractor for every life-safety system in your building.

Stop juggling four vendors and four inspection schedules. Get a quote for sprinkler service that's coordinated with your fire alarm, extinguisher, and emergency lighting to reduce the number of visits & interruptions to your property.

Why Titan for Fire Sprinklers

  • Single point of accountability. One Titan project number across fire alarm, sprinkler, extinguisher, and emergency lighting — even when partners handle the wet work.
  • Connecticut-only focus. Our partner relationships are Connecticut-licensed and Connecticut-based. No multi-state handoffs.
  • NICET Level IV design oversight. When sprinkler and fire alarm need to interlock, we own both sides of the interface.
  • AHJ relationships across CT. We file your NFPA 25 inspection reports in the format your local fire marshal expects.
  • Combined inspection visit. Sprinkler, alarm, extinguisher, and emergency lighting can be coordinated for services required for annual inspections — reducing tenant disruption and your overhead.
  • CT State License #3274113. Locally owned, locally operated, locally insured.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often does Connecticut require sprinkler system inspection?

NFPA 25 sets the inspection, testing, and maintenance schedule for water-based fire protection systems. Most components require quarterly visual checks, annual functional tests, and 5-year internal inspections. Connecticut adopts NFPA 25 in the State Fire Safety Code, and AHJs across the state expect documented compliance with each interval.

What's the difference between wet and dry sprinkler systems?

Wet systems are filled with water year-round and discharge through any sprinkler head exposed to enough heat to break its bulb. Dry systems are filled with pressurized air or nitrogen — the air bleeds out when a head opens, allowing water to flow. Dry systems are required wherever pipes can freeze (parking garages, attics, unheated warehouses).

Does Titan install sprinkler systems directly?

We deliver complete fire sprinkler solutions through long-standing partnerships with vetted, CT-licensed sprinkler contractors. You get a single Titan project number, one inspection cycle, and one accountable point of contact across fire alarm, sprinkler, extinguisher, and emergency lighting — even though the wet work is done by a partner crew.

Can sprinklers go off accidentally and cause water damage?

Accidental discharges are rare in well-maintained systems. Each sprinkler head is heat-activated; it does not respond to smoke or to a fire elsewhere in the building. The most common cause of unexpected discharge is mechanical damage to a head — which routine NFPA 25 inspection is designed to catch.

Can Titan inspect a sprinkler system another contractor installed?

Yes. We assume inspection cycles for any UL-listed system — wet, dry, pre-action, deluge, foam, or specialty suppression. We'll review prior inspection reports if available and rebuild the device list during the first walkthrough.

Find the Best Solution — When It Matters Most

Reliability, compliance, and performance are built into everything we deliver, so you can have confidence your facility and every occupant is always protected.