Grenfell Tower: 137 high-rise buildings in 41 local authorities fail fire safety tests
Cladding samples tested as part of ‘major national investigation’ have produced 100 per cent failure rate
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Your support makes all the difference.At least 137 high-rise buildings in 41 local authorities have failed fire safety tests in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire.
Cladding samples tested as part of a “major national investigation” into the use of panelling on high-rise blocks have so far produced a 100 per cent failure rate, a Government spokesperson said.
Prime Minister Theresa May told local authorities to “work on the assumption” that cladding samples would fail safety tests.
Combustible cladding was thought to have aided the “unprecedented” spread of the fire in Grenfell Tower which killed at least 80 people on 14 June.
The National Housing Federation has called on the Government to stop the testing and instead focus on making people safe.
Chief executive David Orr said: “These tests were the right thing to do, but the results are now conclusive: aluminium composite material (ACM) cladding simply does not pass these tests and is deemed unsafe.
“Across the country, valuable resources – from specialist equipment to expert time – are being poured into a testing process of which the results are already known.”
Mr Orr said the testing process had revealed a “systematic failure” around the development, manufacture and regulation of cladding.
A further 460 social housing blocks are set to be tested but fears were growing that the true figure of unsafe blocks could be far higher, with private residential high rises also affected.
A number of universities, including Nottingham Trent, Bournemouth, Newcastle and Edinburgh Napier, all identified blocks fitted with flammable panelling, and Essex University was also testing cladding on one of its halls of residence.
Testing was also being extended to buildings outside of the housing sector. NHS Improvement identified cladding on 36 hospitals that needed to undergo testing. The Care Quality Commission also advised more than 17,000 care homes, hospices and private hospitals to carry out fire safety checks.
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