The Jerusalem Post

After Grenfell, same firms rehired to replace cladding

- • By TOM BERGI (Toby Melville/Reuters)

LONDON (Reuters) – Some building companies that installed dangerous cladding on social housing blocks across Britain are now winning new contracts following the Grenfell Tower blaze to remove their original work and install panels that can pass safety tests, a Reuters review shows.

The safety of high-rise buildings has come under scrutiny since the Grenfell disaster in June that killed 71 people. The British government, which ordered a series of tests to establish which types of cladding panels met fire safety rules, said those on the London tower block did not comply.

A Reuters review identified 65 other towers with cladding of a type that was approved by local building inspectors, but which government tests found did not comply with the statutory regulation­s. The towers were clad by major builders including French groups Engie and Bouygues, and Britain’s Galliford Try, Forrest, Wates Group, Rydon Group and Willmott Dixon.

The Reuters review was based on publicly available building planning permission documents, which detail the work carried out and the materials used, as well as visits to the towers and statements from housing providers and builders.

For 29 of the buildings, the same builders that installed the cladding have won new contracts to remove or replace the panels, according to the owners of the buildings, who said they were paying millions of pounds for the work. The rehired companies are Willmott Dixon, Wates and Engie.

Willmott Dixon and Rydon said their cladding work complied with safety regulation­s, but did not say how. Wates, Bouygues, Galliford Try and Engie declined to answer questions on whether their work complied with regulation­s.

“Following the Grenfell tragedy, we have been supporting the relevant councils, and removed the cladding where requested. Our primary concern is to ensure all residents in these buildings are secure and safe,” said an Engie spokesman.

In the wake of Grenfell, the government ordered an independen­t review into building regulation­s and fire safety, and the way the rules are complied with and enforced. The review is due to report its findings early next year.

The 65 towers in question are owned by local government­s – known as councils – or housing associatio­ns, which are publicly funded, nonprofit bodies that provide housing intended for poor people.

At the time all the panels were installed, building inspectors – usually council workers but sometimes staff of inspection firms licensed by councils – signed off the work as being compliant with safety regulation­s, according to the owners of the blocks and the building firms involved.

Chris Blythe, CEO of trade body the Chartered Institute of Building, said builders hired to carry out high-rise cladding projects used many subcontrac­tors and advisers, and that this could lead to misunderst­andings, with one party thinking another had ensured work was compliant.

“The business model we have is almost geared up for potential failure,” said Blythe, adding that if fewer parties were involved, there would be less room for confusion over responsibi­lities.

For all 65 blocks identified by Reuters, the councils or council-licensed firms whose inspectors approved the work as compliant either did not respond to requests for comment or declined to comment while the independen­t review was ongoing.

The government has already acknowledg­ed problems with the inspection process, with Fire Service Minister Nick Hurd saying in July there was a “system failure, built up over many years” in the area of regulation enforcemen­t.

However a spokeswoma­n for the Department for Communitie­s and Local Government, which ordered the cladding tests and regulation­s review, said sign-off by inspectors did not absolve contractor­s of responsibi­lity to meet safety standards.

Cladding systems are panels put up on the outside of buildings to improve their aesthetics and energy efficiency.

Since 2006, building regulation­s have required materials used in cladding on high-rise buildings to be able to pass the “BS 8414 test” which measures combustibi­lity.

After Grenfell, the Department for Communitie­s and Local Government ordered a series BS 8414 tests to establish which types of cladding met fire safety rules. It said that, of around 600 social housing towers in England that had cladding, 161 had systems of a type that failed the tests. But it did not name the towers.

Reuters identified 60 blocks which, since 2006, had been cladded with aluminum panels with polyethyle­ne cores – a form of cladding that failed the DCLG’s test, and which the prime minister and three other ministers have said breaches safety regulation­s when used in tall buildings. Five other blocks, also cladded since 2006, had combinatio­ns of panel and insulation board that failed the test.

The three companies that were rehired to replace the cladding on 29 of the towers had all originally fitted aluminum panels with polyethyle­ne cores.

Wates secured contracts with Westminste­r council in central London and One Manchester housing associatio­n to reclad 14 towers it covered in 2007 and 2010.

Willmott Dixon has received contracts from Oxford council and west London’s Octavia housing associatio­n to replace panels it installed on three blocks early this year and in 2013.

Engie has been hired by Barnet Homes in north London to replace cladding on three blocks it clad in 2012. It also has a contract to remove cladding from nine blocks in Salford, north England, owned by the local council that it clad around 2016.

Engie has been hired to remove panels from 12 blocks it clad in 2012 and 2016, and install new cladding on three of them. The contracts are with housing associatio­ns Barnet Homes in north London, and Pendleton Together in Salford, north England.

The three building companies declined to comment on how much the contracts were worth.

However five of the six owners of the buildings told Reuters how much money they were paying for the work.

Oxford council said about £1 million ($1.3m.) for its two blocks; Octavia said about £2m. for one block, Westminste­r council said about £6m. for six blocks; and Barnet Homes said £8.2m. for three blocks.

Salford council said it expects to spend up to £25m. in total for the removal and recladding work on nine blocks. Engie has been hired to remove its original panels, but the recladding contractor has not yet been named.

One Manchester declined to comment on how much its recladding work would cost.

The building companies declined to comment on the figures.

 ??  ?? FLAMES AND SMOKE BILLOW from the Grenfell Tower apartment block in West London in June.
FLAMES AND SMOKE BILLOW from the Grenfell Tower apartment block in West London in June.

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