Toronto Star

Cladding may have helped fuel deadly blaze

Highrise’s new exterior covering ‘clearly one of the things that has to be looked at,’ fire official says

- GREGORY KATZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON— No one has said exactly where the fire started but experts suspect recent renovation­s at the Grenfell Tower, including newly installed external cladding, played a tragic role in spreading the fire so quickly.

A look at the photos and video of the inferno that claimed at least 17 lives shows why the cladding is a possible culprit: The flames can be seen “climbing” up the sides of the public housing building at an alarming pace, overwhelmi­ng efforts to limit the destructio­n.

The exterior cladding and the insulation between its panels were added as part of an extensive renovation completed last year. Matt Wrack, leader of the Fire Brigades Union, told The Associated Press that changes made during the refurbishm­ent project seem to have left the building vulnerable to a catastroph­ic blaze.

“No one knows if it’s cladding or one of the other alteration­s,” he said. “Cladding is clearly one of the things that has to be looked at. We need to look at what happened to cause such a major failure. How can this happen in the U.K. in 2017? It’s staggering. It looks to me it could have been prevented.”

Many people at Grenfell Tower remained unaccounte­d for Thursday, and officials weren’t sure exactly how many were missing. But they expected the death toll to rise significan­tly. In addition to those killed, 74 people were taken to hospitals. Thirty were still hospitaliz­ed on Thursday, with 15 in critical condition.

Wrack said the public has a right to know the cause of the fire. Giving urgency to the quest for answers is the fact that other buildings in Britain and throughout the world use similar materials. Britain has ordered checks at tower blocks that have had comparable renovation­s or are being renovated now with similar methods.

On Thursday, London Police said an investigat­ion had been launched to determine whether the blaze involved any crimes and Prime Minister Theresa May announced a public inquiry, a type of probe that’s used to investigat­e issues of major public concern.

Grenfell Tower’s residents were operating under a “stay put” guidance in case of a fire under the assumption that modern fire doors would protect them in their apartments until the fire department could safely get them out. But the blaze spread too quickly up the sides of the building for that plan to work.

Wrack said the “stay put” policy is sensible — unless the integrity of the fire doors, ceilings and fire-resistant walls fail.

“If it’s compromise­d, something else has to be done,” he said.

When the renovation was carried out, thin cladding was placed outside the tower’s existing exterior, which was made of pre-cast concrete. Architects’ plans called for the use of aluminum composite cladding, with insulation sandwiched between two panels of aluminum.

The architectu­re firm involved in the renovation, Studio E, said in a statement that it would be “inappropri­ate” to comment on Grenfell Tower, but the firm was co-operating with authoritie­s. The company that handled the rehab project, Rydon, said in a statement that it had satisfied all required building regulation­s.

Cladding is often used because it is attractive and can be easy to clean. It gave Grenfell Tower, a 24-storey mid-1970s structure, a more modern look. But it is also suspected that it made the fire harder to contain in the crucial first hour.

Cladding has played a contributi­ng role in numerous fires worldwide, including the New Year’s Eve fire at a 63-story luxury hotel in Dubai, and other severe fires in the United Arab Emirates.

Experts also cited cladding as a factor in similar fires in which flames raced along the sides of buildings, including a highrise fire in Shanghai in 2010 that killed at least 58 people, a 2015 apartment fire in Azerbaijan that left 16 people dead and a 2009 fire at Beijing’s TV Cultural Centre that killed a firefighte­r.

The aluminum panels don’t cause the fires, but if they are made of flammable material — the insulation is often suspected of playing a role — it can serve to spread the flames. The risk can be reduced if less flammable material is used or if the panels are installed with fire breaks separating them at each floor.

When the panels are installed in a continuous row without fire breaks, it can provide an air space that acts like a chimney linking the bottom floors to the top. This can allow a blaze to engulf a building quickly.

The safety of cladding has been a concern in Britain since at least 2000, when a parliament­ary report investigat­ed the 1999 death of a man in a 14-storey apartment block in Irvine, Scotland.

The report recommende­d the use of noncombust­ible cladding or cladding that did not pose an unacceptab­le risk to tenants.

Residents at Grenfell Tower had also complained about a number of other possible fire hazards in the months leading up to the fire. There were worries about exposed gas pipes in recent weeks as well as concerns about rubbish posing a fire risk and the placement of boilers and heaters.

 ?? TOLGA AKMEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? The remains of Grenfell Tower, a residentia­l highrise in west London that was gutted by fire on Wednesday.
TOLGA AKMEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES The remains of Grenfell Tower, a residentia­l highrise in west London that was gutted by fire on Wednesday.
 ?? TOLGA AKMEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Two women embrace after writing messages on a wall of condolence following the blaze at Grenfell Tower.
TOLGA AKMEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Two women embrace after writing messages on a wall of condolence following the blaze at Grenfell Tower.

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