The new Grenfell Tower expert advisory panel on safety has held its first meeting and set out the scope of vital work to ensure people living in high-rise buildings are safe.
The panel will provide independent advice to the Secretary of State on any immediate measures that may be required to be delivered to ensure the safety of buildings for residents following the Grenfell Tower fire.
The panel agreed the most immediate issues they will address and confirmed they will liaise with other experts from a wide range of professions and services as required, ensuring a responsive and dynamic approach, as developments arise.
Another issue facing the panel is the importance of undertaking this work without duplicating or prejudging the outcomes of the public inquiry and police investigation.
To provide advice to the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government the panel will:
- Focus on providing advice relating to fire and building safety, and in particular how to ensure the public are safe in high rise buildings.
- Consider whether there are any immediate additional actions that should be taken to ensure the safety of existing high rise buildings.
- Consider whether there are any changes or clarifications required to existing regulations, and provide advice on possible changes, including making recommendations on the use of specific materials.
- Consider whether the current processes for checking building safety are fit for purpose, and whether any changes are required.
The Expert Advisory Panel has said: “The tests that are currently being conducted are a screening test to identify which Aluminium Composite Material (ACM) panels are of concern. It tests the filler – the core of the panel – to check if it is of limited combustibility (category 1) or not (category 2 or 3). This is in line with the requirement of the Building Regulations guidance. The filler is one element of the overall cladding system.
“If the panel core fails the test we would expect the landlord to take the recommended interim fire safety measures issued on 22 June 2017.
“The Panel will engage with experts across the country to consider whether these panels can be used safely as part of a wider building external wall system, and therefore could remain on a building under certain approved circumstances. If, in the meantime, the responsible person for the building chooses to take down and replace cladding, care should be taken to consider the impact that removal may have on the other wall elements, especially insulation, and therefore on the overall fire integrity of the building as well as other Building Regulation requirements. The advice of a competent professional who specialises in the fire performance of cladding assemblies should be sought to assist in these considerations.”
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