FireRune organizes fire safety work around a central site registry where each building carries its own Building Health Score — a composite number drawn from inspection history, equipment condition, and unresolved violations. Buildings of any type can be added with address, area, floor count, and compliance status. From the registry, every other part of the workflow branches out: floor plans, audits, personnel records, hydrant maps, and document storage all live under the same site entry.
Audits, Plans, and Engineering Tools
The floor plan editor runs on a procedural grid canvas where you place walls, doors, windows, stairs, exits, and assembly points. Ready-made templates cover offices, warehouses, restaurants, classrooms, and retail stores. Route mode overlays animated arrows for primary and backup evacuation paths. Inspections use built-in or fully custom checklists — each item marked pass or fail, with photo evidence attached and violations logged by severity, deadline, and responsible person. Finishing a session produces a signed, exportable PDF. The Audit Lab's History tab shows a compliance trend line chart alongside individual scored entries, and the Heatmap tab plots violation severity directly onto the building plan. Seven engineering calculators handle evacuation time, fire load, extinguisher coverage, smoke detector spacing, fire resistance, water supply demand, and emergency lighting — switchable between GOST, NFPA, and EN standards, with results saved to a specific site.
AI Assistant and Offline Reference
The on-board AI reads photos and questions. Point the camera at a room, storage area, or electrical panel and receive a list of visible fire hazards. Photograph an inspection notice and the AI extracts violations, deadlines, and responsible parties. Regulation questions, equipment queries, and staff briefing script generation are also supported. Cached quick hazard cards work offline for common occupancy types.
A Note on Accessibility
FireRune's status system leans heavily on color: green circles, orange circles, and red exclamation marks carry most of the meaning on site cards and hydrant maps. Users with red-green color blindness may find it difficult to distinguish OK states from warnings without supplementary text labels — a gap the app has not yet addressed.
The dragon eye on the app icon — orange iris, scaled skin, flames radiating outward — sets the visual tone for everything inside: a dark workspace where amber accents mark every active element, much like embers holding their glow against a black ground. It is a deliberate aesthetic choice, and it holds together consistently across all five major screens.