From: zeez on
How to Survive a High-Rise Hotel Fire
How to Survive a High-Rise Hotel Fire
From The Complete Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook

Always treat a hotel fire alarm seriously, and exit following hotel
procedure. If the fire is nearby, use the following procedure.

1. Feel your hotel room doorknob with the back of your hand.
If the doorknob is hot to the touch, go to step 2 and then skip to
step 5. If it is not hot, follow the steps in order.

2. Partially fill the bathtub with cold water.
Soak towels, washcloths, bedsheets, and blankets in the water. If the
water is off, use water from the toilet tank. Put a wet washcloth over
your mouth and nose and a wet sheet or towel over your head.

3. Open the door.

4. If the hallway is smoke-filled, get as low as possible-one to two
feet above the floor.
Make your way to an emergency exit. Never use the elevator.

5. If the door or doorknob is hot, do not open the door.
Wedge wet towels in the crack under the door to keep smoke out.

6. Try calling the front desk or rooms on other floors to check on
conditions in other areas.

7. Turn off fans and air conditioners that could draw smoke into the
room, and open the window slightly.
If the fire is on a floor below you, smoke may enter the room through
the window, so keep the opening narrow. If the fire is not below you,
open the window a third or halfway.

8. Make a tent of wet towels and sheets at the window.
Do not build the tent if smoke is billowing into the room. Hold or
attach one side of the towel or sheet to the window and allow the
other side to fall behind you, so you are protected from smoke and are
breathing outside air. The towels should help to cool the air and make
it easier to breathe.

9. Signal rescue personnel with a white towel or a flashlight.
Wait for rescue.

10. If the air in the room is getting worse, breathing becomes
difficult, and no rescue is forthcoming, try to kick through the wall
into the adjacent room.
Closets are the best locations to try to break through. Sit on the
floor of the closet, and knock on the wall until you hear a hollow
sound. (Wall studs are normally spaced 16 inches apart.) Use both feet
to kick through both surfaces of drywall. You may survive by using
this as a breathing hole, or you may need to continue breaching the
wall until you can escape into the next room.

11. If you cannot breach the wall, go to a window and look at the
outside of the building.
If the rooms have balconies that are close together, consider climbing
to another balcony on the same floor. If there are no neighboring
balconies, you can tie bedsheets together and climb to a balcony
directly beneath yours. Use square knots (the first step in tying your
shoes, done twice) and lower yourself one floor only. Consider this
option only as a last resort, and only do it if you are attempting to
escape an immediate danger or to reach rescue personnel.

Be Aware
• Ladders on fire trucks usually reach only to the seventh floor of a
high-rise building. Consider booking a room below this level.
• Poolside or courtyard rooms are likely to be inaccessible to ladder
trucks, even if they are below the seventh floor. Consider staying in
a streetside room.
• Upon check-in, make sure the hotel has smoke detectors and fire
sprinklers.
• Count the doors between your room and the nearest fire exit. This
will help you get out safely if smoke reduces visibility.
• Keep your room key where it can be found in the dark.
• Never jump from a height of more than two floors or you risk death.

http://irreference.com/how-to-survive-a-high-rise-hotel-fire/