Last edited 21 Jan 2025

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A contractor discusses the Building Safety Act

ATJ 152 Tony Lawther,Managing Director,BriggsAmasco 1000 .jpg

The Building Safety Act, which became law in April 2022, is the foundation of a new building safety regime for the construction sector. A significant amount of secondary legislation has since been introduced, together with supporting industry guidance.

Following the tragic Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017, Dame Judith Hackitt was appointed by the UK Government to undertake an independent review of the Building Regulations and fire safety. It focused on the regulations’ application to high-rise residential buildings. Published in 2018, Dame Judith’s final report: Building a Safer Future: Independent Review of Building Regulations and Fire Safety, set out the need for the industry to undergo a cultural shift to embed “systemic change” in support of the delivery of safer buildings.

We need to adopt a very different approach to the regulatory framework covering the design,construction and maintenance of high-rise residential buildings. It needs to recognise the complexity of high-rise buildings, as well as acknowledge that their integrity can be compromised due to the involvement of many different agencies.

The Act defines new responsibilities:

Accountable persons have a range of duties in relation to relevant occupied higher-risk buildings to ensure safety risks are managed and residents’ concerns are addressed. Building owners, landlords and developers are required to pay for the remediation of historic safety defects and may need to pay the Building Safety Levy on new residential projects.

And duty-holders are required to manage building safety risks during the design and construction of all buildings. The Act introduces new systems as well:

The Building Safety Act will establish a stronger regulatory framework for construction products through secondary legislation. The Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS), which regulates a wide range of products, has extended its remit to take on responsibility as the National Regulator for Construction Products.

The OPSS, together with local Trading Standards, has powers to enter business premises, inspect and test goods and equipment, and examine documents. As a regulator for construction products, the OPSS aims to deliver safer construction products, better buildings, and improved protection for people and communities,as well as confidence and growth in the construction products market through effective regulation and enforcement.

The Building Safety Act was a long time in the making, involving months and years of consultation between construction and government stakeholders. But regulating for safer buildings is one thing, ensuring compliance is quite another. It is the duty of construction industry stakeholders to show vigilance in adhering to the legislation – a crucial step in the direction of safer, higher quality new buildings.


This article appears in the AT Journal issue 152 Winter 2025 aasc 'A Contractor’s Guide to the Building Safety Act' and was written by Tony Lawther, Managing Director, BriggsAmasco.

--CIAT

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