📱

Read on Your E-Reader

Thousands of readers get articles like this delivered straight to their Kindle or Boox. New articles arrive automatically.

Learn More

This is a preview. The full article is published at bbc.co.uk.

Buildings could still burn under 'spineless' new safety law, industry leader warns

Buildings could still burn under 'spineless' new safety law, industry leader warns

By Phil HendryBBC News

Buildings could still burn under 'spineless' new safety law, industry leader warns Government plans to turn post-Grenfell fire safety guidance into law have been strongly criticised by a leading voice in the construction industry. All 63 blocks of flats that make up Stratford’s East Village have been found to have dangerous cladding and fire safety defects David Jones, president of the Institute of Construction Management, says the guidance for multi-storey residential buildings is "loose", "spineless" and "open to interpretation". He argues it permits too many "tolerable" risks - for example, allowing flammable materials in window systems and between floors to remain even if they could let fire spread. "It's allowing developers to game the system," the veteran of more than 50 years says, adding that making it law would be an "absolute abomination". Mr Jones is the first senior building industry leader to publicly criticise the plans, which are currently out for consultation. The government says the guidelines are a proportionate approach to dealing with the flammable cladding crisis. Ministers insist making them law will bring clarity and certainty to the process of deciding which fire safety defects need addressing. Cladding campaigners say the word "tolerable" appears dozens of times in the guidelines, which are known in the industry as PAS 8890. Combustible materials are allowed to remain in place if risks are assessed to be "tolerable" - meaning in a standard fire test a blaze does not spread beyond one floor within 15 minutes or two floors within 30 minutes. Mr Jones argues that in the guidance, engineers are not explicitly required to present fire test safety data for these materials, making assessments subjective and open to interpretation. He believes the lack of a ban on materials with "limited combustibility" is "another gaming of the system. It's a fuel, it just burns a little bit slower." Part of the motivation for tolerating certain risks is to avoid delays caused by disagreements about how much work is needed to make buildings constructed with cladding safe. Progress has been slow in the eight years since the Grenfell tragedy. Ministry of Housing statistics for December show around 475 of the more than 5,500 blocks so far identified as unsafe have been completely fixed and certified as safe in the last 12 months. Cladding has been replaced in 35% of those dangerous blocks since Grenfell - including nearly all of the tallest buildings with the same type of cladding as Grenfell Tower. Residents' representatives fear that any flammable materials left in place can lead to a lower fire safety rating - even after repairs. In turn, this could result in permanently higher building insurance premiums. In a statement, the government said it was up to the insurance industry to bring premiums down once buildings are certified as safe. The insurance industry says if flammable materials remain, it will price the risk accordingly. Mr Jones also criticises the fact the guidelines only deal with the exterior facades of buildings - covering cladding and insulation...

Preview: ~500 words

Continue reading at Co

Read Full Article

More from BBC News

Subscribe to get new articles from this feed on your e-reader.

View feed

This preview is provided for discovery purposes. Read the full article at bbc.co.uk. LibSpace is not affiliated with Co.

Buildings could still burn under 'spineless' new safety law, industry leader warns | Read on Kindle | LibSpace