Once upon a time there were no RCD's and everything hanging of a couple of rewirable fuses in porcellan holders!! Infact people used adaptors that pluged into a lighting bayonet fitting to power an appliance such as an iron!!
Then we had a single RCD for many years, it provided a new level of electrical safety but the issue was that when it tripped it left you in total darkness, not a good situation to be in especially if you are taking something out the oven.
So the split board appeared with two RCD's and the theory was that if the circuits were shared between the two RCD's then total darkness could be avoided, but only if the property was wired bearing this in mind.
Now the solution is no RCD's and use RCBO's, one for each circuit and now you have a system where each circuit has its own protection and if one trips then you don't have the situation where say a bulb blows, takes out the RCD, heating goes off and pipes freeze.
Having two lighting circuits is not new, it is the way I wired any property and often in larger ones with the kitchen and hallway seperate again. But sometimes having to rewire a property is not open to decision if it is in such a state as to be deemed no longer fit for purpose, but current best practice does not have to be retrofitted to existing servicable installations and if you have a single RCD then so be it until the time for a rewire.
Then we had a single RCD for many years, it provided a new level of electrical safety but the issue was that when it tripped it left you in total darkness, not a good situation to be in especially if you are taking something out the oven.
So the split board appeared with two RCD's and the theory was that if the circuits were shared between the two RCD's then total darkness could be avoided, but only if the property was wired bearing this in mind.
Now the solution is no RCD's and use RCBO's, one for each circuit and now you have a system where each circuit has its own protection and if one trips then you don't have the situation where say a bulb blows, takes out the RCD, heating goes off and pipes freeze.
Having two lighting circuits is not new, it is the way I wired any property and often in larger ones with the kitchen and hallway seperate again. But sometimes having to rewire a property is not open to decision if it is in such a state as to be deemed no longer fit for purpose, but current best practice does not have to be retrofitted to existing servicable installations and if you have a single RCD then so be it until the time for a rewire.