Health and Safety

Fit for purpose: making the industry competent

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Making sure firms and workers are competent to carry out construction projects is one of the biggest post-Grenfell initiatives in the sector. CN investigates the progress to date In the wake of the Grenfell Tower tragedy, Dame Judith Hackitt’s seminal report Building a Safer Future highlighted a construction industry that…

Contracts need rewriting in the wake of second-staircase regs

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Stuart Bosley is managing director of quantum and project advisory at engineering consultancy DeSimone In a resolute move towards enhancing fire-safety measures, the government has taken significant steps in response to the lessons learned from the tragic Grenfell Tower fire. Towards the end of 2022, a proposal was published to…

Tall order: paying for the cladding crisis

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Cladding contractors have a crucial role to play in remediating potentially unsafe high-rise buildings – but they are beset by a variety of problems impacting their ability to implement solutions. Keith Cooper investigates  The precise financial cost of removing unsafe cladding from residential blocks is still one of the great…

Put to the test: the flaws in product certification

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Government-commissioned report calls for overhaul of construction product testing system - but how likely is action? Evidence given to the Grenfell Tower Inquiry raised grave concerns about the process by which cladding materials used on the west London block were tested and approved. In response, in 2021, then housing secretary…

Missing pieces: Is the industry ready for the Building Safety Act?

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As construction professionals and legal experts digest the real-world implications of the Building Safety Act, what are the big unanswered questions? Nobody needs reminding that ongoing building safety reforms are aimed at avoiding a repeat of the dreadful events of June 2017, when 72 people died in a devastating fire…

Are safety probes letting down the industry?

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The official system to investigate construction accidents is failing both victims and the industry Kayla Boor had just left her four-year-old son at school and was walking along the street when a pallet of bricks fell onto her from a building site crane. Two days later, the recently engaged woman…

Our plan to make wellbeing visible

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Bill Hill is chief executive officer of the Lighthouse Construction Industry Charity The statistics about wellbeing in construction do not make for good reading. About 20 per cent of all recorded work-related illness is down to stress, anxiety or depression. The true number is probably higher, because not everything is…

Trouble on the horizon: The post-Brexit law cull threatening onsite safety

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The Work at Height Regulations save lives and are hugely popular in the construction sector. But will moves to ‘sunset’ all EU laws dilute – or even destroy – them? Behind the innocuous-sounding ‘Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill’, lies the prospect of an assault by the government on…

Didcot seven years on: no answers, no lessons, no justice

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As the investigation into the deaths of four men at a decommissioned power station enters its eighth year, Ian Weinfass speaks to some of those still affected by the tragedy and asks why the industry has received no guidance since Sadie Cresswell has been waiting for seven years to find…