Khaleej Times

Cladding samples tested so far failed

- AP

london — Britain’s government urged local officials across the country on Sunday to urgently submit samples of tower block cladding after tests found that all samples tested so far have failed fire safety standards.

In London, officials tried on Sunday to complete the evacuation of hundreds of apartments in four towers deemed unsafe, but faced resistance as several families refused to budge.

The government has collected 34 samples of external cladding — panels widely used to insulate buildings and improve their appearance — and all failed a “combustibi­lity test,” Community Secretary Sajid Javid said. The national testing was ordered after a June 14 fire engulfed Grenfell Tower in London, killing at least 79 people. The tower’s cladding was believed to have rapidly spread that blaze.

The samples came from 17 different locations around the country, including London, Manchester, Plymouth and Portsmouth. A public inquiry is due to determine how the unsafe cladding was allowed to be fitted onto Grenfell in the first place.

In north London, Camden Council ordered residents at Chalcots Estate to leave some 600 apartments late on Friday as a precaution after fire inspectors found problems with the blocks’ fire doors and gas pipes. The council said those issues, combined with the flammable cladding that encased the buildings, meant residents had to leave immediatel­y.

Now hundreds of residents face up to four weeks in temporary accommodat­ions as workers try to upgrade the buildings’ fire safety features. Around 20 families wanted to stay put, but council leader Georgia Gould say they must leave.

Refurbishm­ent of the Chalcots towers was overseen by Rydon, the same company involved in the recent renovation of the now-devastated Grenfell Tower. London Mayor Sadiq Khan backed Camden Council’s decision to evacuate the apartment blocks. —

 ?? — AFP ?? Evacuated residents walk into the Swiss Cottage Leisure Centre and Library, which is being used as a refuge by residents from evacuated towers in the Chalcots estate, in London on Sunday.
— AFP Evacuated residents walk into the Swiss Cottage Leisure Centre and Library, which is being used as a refuge by residents from evacuated towers in the Chalcots estate, in London on Sunday.
 ?? Reuters ?? Workers remove cladding from a residentia­l apartment in the Wythenshaw­e area of Manchester. —
Reuters Workers remove cladding from a residentia­l apartment in the Wythenshaw­e area of Manchester. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates