As the Hackitt report publishes its findings on building regulations and fire safety, a panel put together by the Business Sprinkler Alliance discusses what needs to change to prevent another Grenfell disaster. Debika Ray reports
On 17 May, Dame Judith Hackitt published her long-awaited independent review of building regulations and fire safety, prompted by the fire at Grenfell Tower in June last year.
In anticipation of its publication, 好色先生TV magazine 鈥 in association with the Business Sprinkler Alliance (BSA) 鈥 organised a panel discussion, during which experts in architecture, fire safety and insurance talked about what they wanted to see in the report and how the industry could change to make sure this kind of tragic event never happened again. The conversation ranged from the importance of a chain of accountability in the building process to regulations and the need to consider existing and non-residential buildings alongside new-build structures, with Iain Cox, chair of the BSA, arguing that Grenfell was 鈥渁 symptom of a widespread and deep-seated malaise鈥 in the industry.
An issue that came up repeatedly during the discussions was the need for competency in all those involved in a building project, from client to end-user.
As Cox put it: 鈥淎ll those taking action and [creating] determined policies and making decisions that can affect fire safety must acknowledge their individual responsibilities and recognise the personal competencies required to discharge those responsibilities within integrity.鈥
Regs in question
Opening the discussion, Jane Duncan, former president of the RIBA and chair of its expert panel on fire safety, set up the day after the Grenfell fire, set the tone for the event.
鈥淚t鈥檚 clear the current building, housing and fire safety legislation, and the associated guidance and compliance structures are ambiguous, are open to widely varying interpretation and clearly just not up to the job of regulating to keep people safe,鈥 she said.
The RIBA, she said, had approached Hackitt with recommendations including:
- The overhaul of procurement processes, regulations, roles and responsibilities in the construction of complex, residential buildings;
- Greater independent scrutiny of design and construction;
- The prohibition of combustible materials in the external walls of high-rise buildings;
- A greater role for sprinklers and the requirement for at least two staircases in high and medium-rise buildings.
She expressed concern, however, that the review would not have as much of an impact as many people hoped. 鈥淚 think Hackitt is going to come up with some good suggestions, but I鈥檓 worried about the industry not having the baseline of good prescriptive guidance to help us. Not only do we need to consider long-term changes that are needed, but also the transition period.鈥
There was some disagreement over the suitability of current building regulations. 鈥淚f you think how profoundly things have changed [over recent years] in the built environment, I鈥檓 not sure some of our guidance is keeping pace,鈥 said Tom Roche, senior consultant at property insurer FM Global. 鈥淚 struggle to see how it can keep pace unless you are regularly reviewing them and taking account of some of those changes.鈥
Cox and Duncan agreed, and highlighted the particular need to review Approved Document B, which deals with fire safety.
鈥淭here are many buildings where it could happen. We can鈥檛 just sit here and navel-gaze 鈥 we need to do something鈥
Jane Duncan, RIBA
But Steve Cooper, director of fire safety and engineering company Tenos, said he believed that British building regulations were 鈥減retty good鈥. 鈥淚 think the way they are used and applied sometimes isn鈥檛 correct. I don鈥檛 have a problem with Approved Document B 鈥 I don鈥檛 find it ambiguous or confusing, provided it鈥檚 used by people who know what they are doing.鈥
Process problems
A related issue dominated the discussion: the fragmentation of the construction process since the time when an architect would see a project through from start to finish, and the associated lack of accountability when things go wrong. The speakers argued that a 鈥済olden thread鈥 needed to run through the construction process 鈥 in the form of a single person who takes responsibility for decisions made early on.
鈥淎ccountability isn鈥檛 a word that gets used much in our industry and perhaps it ought to,鈥 said Duncan. 鈥淲e have to have a complete line of accountability all the way through so, if somebody is handing over information about risk or fire safety, they can鈥檛 just hand over a piece of paper and hope somebody鈥檚 got enough information in there to understand the initial thought process.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 clear current building, housing and fire safety legislation are not up to the job of keeping people safe鈥
Jane Duncan, RIBA
Referring to Hackitt鈥檚 interim report, published earlier in December, she added: 鈥淲e welcome its discussion on roles, responsibilities and defined duty holders,鈥 adding: 鈥淲e have to take responsibility 鈥 we have to tell our clients, 鈥榳e are not going to use that material鈥 or 鈥榳e aren鈥檛 going to manage with one staircase鈥.鈥
Cox raised the need for formal sign-overs in the construction process, and the need for plans of the final buildings to be handed over to the occupier. Meanwhile, Roche argued that the system for verifying that what is originally specified is eventually delivered needs to be tightened up. 鈥淚t鈥檚 become all too apparent that we have too light a touch when it comes to verification.鈥
好色先生TV control
Cooper pointed to the diminished role of building control since its privatisation in the 1980s as a problem that needed to be addressed. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 led to clients trying to seek the cheapest service and building control bodies providing the cheapest service they can get away with.鈥
Duncan also raised the issue of cost-cutting in another context: 鈥淲e need to get rid of this ridiculous title 鈥榲alue engineering鈥, which in many cases is either not good value or not good engineering. You get what you pay for, and that has meant a country with a lot of recently constructed buildings inexpertly erected and monitored, with inadequate maintenance to keep people safe,鈥 she said. 鈥淎ll parts of the industry need to bail out of the race to ever-cheaper construction.鈥
鈥淒ame Judith and her team have provided a framework that could have a significant impact on remedying the problems鈥
Steve Cooper, Tenos
She ended her talk on a note of caution 鈥 and a reminder of the practical and ethical importance of this discussion. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we are in any position to say there will never be another Grenfell Tower.
鈥淚 have heard many people say, 鈥業t will never happen again鈥, but it could happen tonight. There are many buildings where it could happen. We can鈥檛 just sit here and navel-gaze 鈥 we need to do something.鈥
Hackitt report: the reaction
Since this discussion took place, Judith Hackitt has published her review. In it, she criticised the 鈥渞ace to the bottom鈥 that led to Grenfell fire, arguing that the construction industry had a 鈥渟ystemic鈥 problem and recommending the creation of a new regulator 鈥 the Joint Competent Authority (JCA) 鈥 to oversee the delivery and maintenance of safe buildings. However, she stopped short of recommending a ban on flammable cladding because, she says, it would not address the root causes of the problem.
Reactions to the report were mixed: while many saw it as a thorough assessment of the industry鈥檚 weaknesses, others pointed to the fact that it called for little by way of changes to specific regulations and said its failure to call for a ban on flammable cladding was a betrayal of the 72 people who died because of the Grenfell Tower fire. In a statement, Duncan said: 鈥淭his was supposed to be a review of building regulations and fire safety following the tragedy at Grenfell Tower. It鈥檚 a thorough report on the current state of the regulatory system and construction industry, but it offers no changes whatsoever to the actual regulations or baseline guidance.鈥
FM Global鈥檚 Roche noted the controversy over the absence of a ban on flammable cladding, which he said distracted from the rest of the report and damaged its credibility. 鈥淚t should have made a straight out call for the government to get on with a review of the current technical guidance, with a particular focus on things like construction materials and the use of sprinklers,鈥 he said.
鈥淚f you think how profoundly things have changed, I鈥檓 not sure some of our guidance is keeping pace鈥
Tom Roche, FM Global
Both Roche and the BSA鈥檚 Cox noted that the report was conspicuously silent on non-residential buildings. 鈥淎lthough the concentration on high-rise residential buildings is understandable, and appropriate, it is unfortunate that this is not widened further,鈥 Cox said. 鈥淚 am also disappointed that property protection was not considered 鈥 this does not make sense when the cost of fire is rising.鈥
He felt, however, that the direction of travel was right. 鈥淚t鈥檚 strategically sound but provides a route to a solution rather than the solutions that we need now.鈥
Tenos鈥 Cooper was broadly positive: 鈥淕enerally I think that the recommendations are very well thought-through and could, if implemented correctly, lead to fundamental improvements in the way we design and construct buildings for safety. Dame Judith and her team have provided a framework that could have a significant impact on remedying the problems that we see in some parts of the industry and in the building approvals process specifically.鈥
In his opinion, the building approvals process has broken down. 鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely right that the building approvals process for higher-risk residential buildings should only be trusted to competent surveyors [as Hackitt has recommended]. I also think that the idea of a JCA is good, but it remains to be seen how this will work in practice. I can see delays in the whole design and build process if this aspect isn鈥檛 implemented and resourced appropriately.鈥