The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Experts question site access between blazes

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art school board’s management of the building said: “It is clear to me that the GSA regarded the use of the building, with some restrictio­n, to be akin to ‘business as usual’, with the constructi­on site seen as an attractive resource, rather than a dangerous, vulnerable enclosure that needed to be respected and avoided.”

The building, known as the Mack, was heavily damaged by fire in 2014 after a projector ignited gases from a foam canister used in a student project.

It was due to reopen this year after a £32 million appeal headed by Peter Capaldi and Brad Pitt raised the money needed to restore it.

But it caught fire again a year ago in a far more devastatin­g blaze. The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service have not yet identified the cause.

GSA students were photograph­ed posing in hard hats, high-visibility vests and protective gloves, glasses and boots next to scaffoldin­g and ladders in a part of the building in November 2017.

But they were also pictured without protective clothing in a room known as the furniture gallery.

It was previously revealed that the room was also used to host a “Mackintosh memories tea party”. Businesses had also been taken on tours of the building as part of fundraisin­g efforts. Mr Gibb said: “The extent of use was more restricted after (contractor­s) Kier were involved but, during their contract, the GSA used the building for their project office, held staff meetings, social gatherings and fundraisin­g events and teaching was carried out in the building.

“It is also clear that personal protective equipment was not worn all of the times. All of this occurred in a vulnerable and dangerous building without the benefit of the required compartmen­tation and without the benefit of the sprinklers that would have saved the building and reduced the risk to its users.”

He added: “I don’t believe allowing students within the building was appropriat­e in any circumstan­ces.” Holyrood’s culture committee has said the board did not give sufficient priority to safeguardi­ng the building and has called for a full public inquiry into the two fires. According to a submission to the committee by a GSA lecturer, site visits to the Mack were made by GSA third year students as part of a “Rediscover­ing Mackintosh” course and an “in-depth educationa­l experience” of the project. Glasgow School of Art said yesterday that public access via the contractor to constructi­on and restoratio­n projects “under strictly managed conditions and health and safety protocols are both common and encouraged to engage the wider public”.

A spokesman added the art school had “engaged in this activity for the benefit of our diverse range of stakeholde­rs with an interest in the Mackintosh restoratio­n”.

Two weeks ago, Scottish Fire & Rescue said several hundred tonnes of debris still had to be removed from the remains of the building.

 ??  ?? A second damaging fire rips through Glasgow School of Art in June 2018, and inset, overhead view of stricken Mackintosh building
A second damaging fire rips through Glasgow School of Art in June 2018, and inset, overhead view of stricken Mackintosh building

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