All combustible articles
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Government announces plans to toughen combustible cladding ban
Height threshold to be lowered as housing secretary spells out more details on building safety regulator
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CLT ruling sends Swan back to drawing board on high-rise
House builder seeks alternatives after government effectively rules out use of material on buildings 18m high or taller
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Cladding ban details suggests CLT will be outlawed
Government has ruled out the use of any material that does not have one of the top combustiblity ratings in buildings over 18m
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Housing secretary set to ban combustible cladding
Ban is not expected to apply to existing buildings
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Combustible cladding set to remain on almost three quarters of private sector homes
Over 200 buildings have no plan in place to replace problem cladding
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Combustible cladding ban should extend to existing buildings, MPs say
The housing committee said ban should also cover hospitals, hotels and student accommodation
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Plymouth housing authority appoints contractor for cladding work
Exeter firm Mi-Space is set to replace composite cladding on three towers
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Official costs of combustibles ban too low, says expert
Using non-combustible cladding material could add more than £60/m2 to high-rise buildings Â
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Combustible cladding ban could add £75,000 to high-rise build costs
Government has published its proposals for banning combustible cladding
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Combustible cladding ban consultation to start next week
Housing secretary James Brokenshire confirmed details to MPs yesterday