The ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV Regulations team at the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister must be among the hardest-working civil servants in government. They have been working on so many amendments to ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV Regulations recently, specifiers could be forgiven for not keeping up.
A review of Part M, governing access to buildings, is next on the agenda – and this only six months after the last amendments were published. The ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV Regulations minister Phil Hope says that the new standards could be in place in two years, once a public consultation and regulatory impact have been carried out.
Hope offered a glimpse of the changes to come in a select committee last month. He said that existing regulations could be toughened by incorporating the Lifetime Homes standard into Part M. The standards are designed to ensure that all new or converted houses and flats are flexible enough to cater for the changing needs of inhabitants.
The inclusion of Lifetime Homes standards could lead to the following in Part M:
- Stairs designed to take stairlifts at a later stage
- Ground-floor bedroom and toilet
- Ground-floor space for installation of a shower.
The government says the review will also determine whether the Lifetime Standards need to be updated to reflect the recommendations of British Standard BS 8300. At the moment Lifetime Standards do not incorporate the additional space requirements necessary for occupation by wheelchair users.
Help with meeting access rules
The Centre for Accessible Environments and Riba Enterprises have published a new edition of Designing for Accessibility. The guidance covers Part M and British Standard BS 8300:2001 Design of ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTVs and their approaches to meet the needs of disabled people. It should also help specifiers meet the requirements of the Disability Discrimination Act, which will come into force in October 2004. The guide has a section on specifying surfaces correctly, which the CAE says will aid orientation, acoustic conditions, ease of passage for wheelchairs and buggies, and safety.
Copies are available from RIBA Bookshops www.ribabookshops.com
Recent flooring standards
BS 7932:2003Determination of the unpolished and polished pendulum test value of surfacing units This British Standard describes a test method for determining the unpolished and the polished pendulum test value of surfacing units for pedestrian or traffic purposes, using a flat-bed polishing machine in conjunction with pendulum test equipment. Price £44, BSI subscribing members £22 BS 8000-9:2003
Workmanship on building sites. Cementitious levelling screeds and wearing screeds. Code of practice BS 8000-9 gives recommendations on laying cementitious levelling screeds and wearing screeds. This standard replaces BS 8000-9:1999 which is now withdrawn. The old edition has been updated to include changes in terminology that reflect changes in European Standards. Material specifications have also been updated and further checking procedures have been introduced. Price: £56, BSI Subscribing members £28 BS 8425:2003
Code of practice for installation f laminate floor coverings This British Standard gives recommendations for the installation of laminate floor coverings in new or existing buildings. Generally, laminate floor coverings are installed as floating floors but, in some applications, they can be integrally glued to the sub-floor. This British Standard only details suitable methods for floating floor installation and advises on the selection of materials required for their implementation. Price: £56, BSI Subscribing members £28
Flooring
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The rules
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