The Borneo Post

Cladding on London tower not graded fire-resistant – Report

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LONDON: The type of cladding used on the exterior walls of a London tower block that went up in flames this week was not graded fire-resistant and its use is restricted in the United States, British media reported yesterday.

The aluminium cladding, called Reynobond, was made by US company Arconic and had a polyethyle­ne core, which the reports said was slightly cheaper than fire-resistant models by the same manufactur­er.

It was fitted by a company called Harley Facades, which has put out a statement following Wednesday’s blaze saying: “We are not aware of any link between the fire and the exterior cladding of the tower.”

The Times newspaper quoted a Reynobond salesman as saying that in the United States the panels were banned for buildings taller than 12 metres, far lower than the 24- storey Grenfell Tower that was consumed by the roaring blaze.

The residentia­l tower was built in 1974 and had been extensivel­y refurbishe­d in works that were completed last year.

“It’s because of the fire and smoke spread. The FR (version) is fire- resistant. The PE is just plastic,” the salesman was quoted as saying.

The paper said the fire-resistant Reynobond panels sell for £ 24 per square metre (about 27 euros, US$ 31) — only £ 2 more expensive than the version used.

Rydon, the firm responsibl­e for the overall refurbishm­ent of the tower, said its work had ‘met all required building regulation­s — as well as fire regulation­s and health and safety standards’.

Arnold Turling, a member of the Associatio­n of Specialist Fire Protection, told The Daily Telegraph that the panels acted as a ‘wind tunnel’.

“Any burning material falls down the gaps and the fire spreads up very rapidly — it acts as its own chimney,” he was quoted as saying.

The Daily Telegraph listed several other fire safety concerns about the building, including the lack of a central sprinkler system and missing fire doors.

The paper also said that the last full assessment of fire risks for the building was in December 2015, before the refurbishm­ent was completed last year.

It added that former prime minister Margaret Thatcher had eased building regulation­s in 1986, and that a review of laws promised after a council house fire that killed six people in 2009 had never been carried out.

Grenfell Tower residents had expressed a series of concerns to the local council, including the lack of sprinklers and the fact that it had a single staircase — a common feature of 1970s tower blocks.

It’s because of the fire and smoke spread. The FR (version) is fire-resistant. The PE is just plastic. Reynobond salesman

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