Harefield Gazette

Fire chief fears housebuild­ers ‘gaming system’

‘BUILDINGS MAY BE BEING DESIGNED TO AVOID STRICT FIRE SAFETY RULES’

- By DAVID LYNCH AND BARRY ELLAMS @myldn

HOUSEBUILD­ERS may be “gaming the system” to avoid fire safety rules put in place after the Grenfell Tower tragedy, a fire chief has warned.

Paul Jennings, deputy commission­er of the London Fire Brigade, said there are “hundreds if not thousands” of new buildings examined by fire safety engineers which may be “deliberate­ly” designed to avoid stringent fire safety rules put in place after the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017.

They include those designed to be lower than an 18-metre limit to be considered a high-rise building, which would require more advanced fire safety measures.

He told the BBC’s Newsnight: “We have got examples where we think people are deliberate­ly designing and building their buildings below that 18 metre, six floor threshold because they know if they reach that threshold they would have to put advanced and more intricate fire safety measures in.”

The deputy commission­er described these new buildings in the UK capital as examples where there “may be gaming the system”.

He warned: “We are potentiall­y extending the legacy issues that we are already currently discoverin­g that are in London and in the cities across the country.”

When asked how many new buildings in London were being constructe­d to avoid the rules, he said it was likely “hundreds and if not thousands”.

“We are seeing around 60% of the building consultati­ons that come into the fire engineerin­g team and others are ones where we are going backwards,” added Mr Jennings.

The London Fire Brigade’s warning comes after the Housing Secretary, Michael Gove, made his first appearance in front of a committee of MPs who asked questions about building safety.

On Monday, Mr Gove told the Housing, Communitie­s and Local Government Committee: “We collective­ly – the department, some in local government, others in the private sector – failed people at Grenfell and there are people who were and still are in buildings where there is a significan­t risk.”

He went on to say that, as the Grenfell Inquiry turned its attention to the Government’s role in the disaster, his department “will be seen to have, on a couple of occasions, not necessaril­y appreciate­d the importance of fire safety”.

Asked about who should pay for the work required to make the affected buildings safe, Mr Gove confirmed that he would “pause” plans that would see leaseholde­rs take out loans to pay for remediatio­n work.

Some leaseholde­rs have reportedly been hit with bills for more than £100,000 to replace unsafe cladding or pay for so-called “waking watches” where someone is employed to patrol a building checking for fires.

The Housebuild­ers Federation, which represents housing developers, told Newsnight: “Developers meet the building regulation­s set by Government without exception.

“Standards today are considerab­ly more exacting than previous iterations. Building regulation­s differ dependent on the type of building, but all have residents safety at their core.”

The Government said: “The safety and wellbeing of residents is our priority and the Building Safety Bill will strengthen oversight and protection­s for everyone in high rise buildings.

“All new buildings of any height must meet building regulation­s fire safety requiremen­ts and we have already banned the use of all combustibl­e materials on external walls of new residentia­l buildings over 18 metres.”

 ?? ?? Grenfell Tower pictured under scaffoldin­g
Grenfell Tower pictured under scaffoldin­g

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