Cost of PI poses existential risk to some practices, institute acknowledges
RIBA has launched a review of the professional risk and professional indemnity insurance market in response to a crisis it acknowledges is 鈥渨orsening鈥 in terms of the cost and breadth of cover available to architects.
The cost of PI cover has been increasing in leaps and bounds in the five years since the Grenfell Tower tragedy exposed widespread problems with building safety.
Practices have this year been reporting tenfold increases in the annual price for PI insurance 鈥 in return for less extensive cover than they previously obtained.
Setting out its plans for a 鈥渃omprehensive study鈥 of the PI insurance market 鈥 starting with a survey of members鈥 experiences 鈥 RIBA said the spiralling cost and declining level of cover provided by PII policies now posed a 鈥渟erious threat鈥 to the profession. It said smaller practices in particular were placed at serious risk of closure or of being forced into the unregulated sector.
RIBA president Simon Allford (pictured) said the full study would examine a range of measures from the standardisation of PII proposal forms and policy wording to enhanced professional risk-management techniques.
However he said the starting point for the study would be members , which is open to responses until 25 July.
鈥淲hile the Arb has proposed some welcome adjustments to support the profession in the short term, we urgently require solutions to manage professional design liability and improve the availability of appropriate insurance cover for architects and consumers,鈥 Allford said. 鈥淭his study relies on data and evidence from our membership.鈥
RIBA said the full study aimed to 鈥減romote improved levels of professional and regulatory confidence in a manner that is attractive to the PII market, to enhance the availability and breadth of cover, and realign premiums at an appropriate and affordable level for members and their practices鈥.
It is being led by a task-and-finish group chaired by RIBA board and council member Jennifer Dixon.
She said that with a total premium level of 拢75m, the architectural PII market was small relative to the other built-environment professions. But she said the role of architects as lead designer in building projects attracted a 鈥渄isproportionately high鈥 level of liability within the project design team.
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