好色先生TVs above this height banned from using combustible cladding
Some developers are deliberately constructing buildings just below 18m in height to avoid current restrictions rather than improve building safety, a government expert has warned.
Under regulations introduced in December 2018, buildings of 18m or more are banned from using combustible cladding materials.
But Chandru Dissanayeke told a Fire Protection Association conference in London yesterday (Monday) that 鈥渟ome builders are avoiding the rules by building below 18m鈥.
Dissanayeke, director of building safety reform at the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, added: 鈥淓xperts who say there鈥檚 a difference between 17.95m and 18m are being dishonest to themselves.鈥
Last week, Dissanayeke鈥檚 boss, the housing secretary Robert Jenrick, said he planned to extend the ban on combustible materials on exterior walls from 18m to 11m, and to ban the use of aluminium composite cladding, the type blamed for the severity of the Grenfell Tower fire, on all buildings.
Dissanayeke added: 鈥淲e need industry to step up and provide leadership. There are parts of the industry which know about the risks and are closing their eyes and that鈥檚 disgraceful.鈥
His comments came as the second phase of the Grenfell inquiry began yesterday, with lawyers for main contractor Rydon and architect Studio E making their opening oral submissions to inquiry chair Sir Martin Moore-Bick
Dissanayeke also outlined more details on how the government鈥檚 new fire safety regulator will work. It will use staff from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) combined with some additional staff.
He said the regulator would use 鈥渢he infrastructure that HSE has and existing expertise to begin with鈥. But he said the new body would not just be an extension of the existing regulator. 鈥淭here will be some re-prioritisation at first, but this will be a strong new regulator,鈥 he added.
Previous plans had suggested the body would be run jointly by the HSE, local authority building control and fire and rescue services. The former HSE chair Judith Hackitt had called for a 鈥渏oint competency authority鈥 in her 2018 report on fire and safety regulations commissioned in the wake of the 2017 fire at Grenfell Tower.
But last week .
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