Scottish ministers have been given the power to directly commission remediation work on dangerous cladding without owners’ permission. On Tuesday (14 May) the Scottish Parliament unanimously approved the Housing (Cladding Remediation) (Scotland) Bill. The new law will give building owners seven days’ notice of ministers’ intention to carry out work.…
Building safety
Does the builder-developer model need to change?
As the industry awaits the Grenfell Inquiry phase-two report, Dr Bernard Rimmer asks whether the builder-developer business model needs a complete overhaul It looks as though the final report of the Grenfell Inquiry could be presented to the government this summer, so perhaps now is the time to reflect on…
BSA: changing regulations offer unwelcome distractions
Charis Beverton is a partner at law firm Winckworth Sherwood April marked two years since the Building Safety Act 2022 (BSA) received royal assent, pledging far-reaching overhauls to building standards in response to the Grenfell Tower fire disaster. “Liability for remediation costs – and where they sit within the supply…
Rydon fire safety costs: £19m and growing
The main contractor on the refurbishment of Grenfell Tower has spent more than £19m remediating fire safety problems, and has provided for more to come. The firm’s remediation work has so far covered 500 apartment properties, it said in its accounts for the year to 30 September 2023. Rydon named…
Regulator forced firms to recall and improve products
The government’s product safety regulator issued multiple recall and improvement notices to two building insulation manufacturers, an official has said. Speaking earlier this week at a Building Safety Regulator event, Duncan Johnson, deputy director for construction products regulation at the Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS), said two firms were…
Modules cause confusion for products regulator
The UK’s product regulator is unsure whether it is responsible for modules used in offsite building, it has admitted. Defining what constitutes a product and falls under the remit of the products regulator is still an “open question” when it comes to modular construction, an official said. Duncan Johnson, deputy…
No government action on product safety a year after landmark report
The government has failed to respond to a key post-Grenfell construction product safety report a year after its publication. Report co-author Paul Morrell has consistently hit out at the government for its lack of action on the sweeping independent review into the UK’s construction product testing regime, which was released…
Scotland handed power to introduce building safety levy
Developers in Scotland will have to pay towards the cost of remediating dangerous buildings under proposals to be considered by the country’s parliament. Powers have now been secured by the Scottish government to introduce a charge equivalent to the Building Safety Levy, which is expected to contribute £3bn over the…
Parliament tower refurb delayed after tender blunder
Work to repair parliament’s tallest structure, the Victoria Tower, faces a year’s delay due to a botched procurement process, Construction News can reveal. Last May, parliamentary authorities launched a tender for a £95m job to repair the tower’s crumbling masonry, windows, cast-iron roof, rainwater drainage and flagpole. However, bidders for…
Northern Ireland to extend time limit for defective-building claims
Legislation on defective buildings is to be introduced in Northern Ireland to extend the time limit for compensation claims to 30 years, in a move to address an “unfair disparity” with the rest of the UK. Communities minister Gordon Lyons said the new bill would ensure residents of Northern Ireland…