Barwell doesn't seem keen to answer questions as to if he suppressed a fire report when Housing Minister
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The just let them die we can't do anything more to get them out safely is the Victorian solution.
Kensington council leader seems to be blaming the residents about sprinklers this morning, this chap could be in a lot of trouble.
So what is coming out is that the cladding type used is illegal to install above four stories in the US, and the cladding recommended for high rise would have only been an added cost of £5000 on the £10m total refit.
So what is coming out is that the cladding type used is illegal to install above four stories in the US, and the cladding recommended for high rise would have only been an added cost of £5000 on the £10m total refit.
So what is coming out is that the cladding type used is illegal to install above four stories in the US, and the cladding recommended for high rise would have only been an added cost of £5000 on the £10m total refit.
the data specs for the cladding say that its specifically suitable for stories above 18m, about 4/5 stories. it also seems unlikely a product switch would be made for £5k saving on a £2.6m job (the value of the cladding contract). so i'd suggest being very careful about some of the information. if you're reading the Indi article, there looks like a significant difference in the material, citing polythene rather than polyisocyanurate. it may be that the US has prohibited similar type of cladding?
You lefties are all the same. There's not a magic money tree. And before you start going on about things such as the recent £130 million cost to the public purse of the election last week, remember we now have a strong and stable government, so it was money well spent.
the data specs for the cladding say that its specifically suitable for stories above 18m, about 4/5 stories. it also seems unlikely a product switch would be made for £5k saving on a £2.6m job (the value of the cladding contract). so i'd suggest being very careful about some of the information. if you're reading the Indi article, there looks like a significant difference in the material, citing polythene rather than polyisocyanurate. it may be that the US has prohibited similar type of cladding?
So what is coming out is that the cladding type used is illegal to install above four stories in the US, and the cladding recommended for high rise would have only been an added cost of £5000 on the £10m total refit.
You'r own posts on here link to the Rydon site which state the project was ECO funded. That's where the money came from.
I realise that. Do you realise that means they got it done even more on the cheap?
it also seems unlikely a product switch would be made for £5k saving on a £2.6m job (the value of the cladding contract).
Just a thought: Could it be that the company who actually made the cladding was and not the company who fitted it be at fault here?
Hindsight is a wonderful thing, isn't it? With c£10m spent on this building recently, it doesn't sound as though scrimping has taken place, but I say that as a complete layman.
Hindsight is a wonderful thing, isn't it? With c£10m spent on this building recently, it doesn't sound as though scrimping has taken place, but I say that as a complete layman.
It's difficult to try and not point the finger immediately following tragedies such as this, but it's clearly concerning to read that governments as far back as 1999 were given warnings about this:
Glyn Evans from the Fire Brigades Union told a Select Committee on Environment, Transport and Regional Affairs "we do not really recognise the problem of vertical envelopment. If you get multistorey buildings you will get fire spread up the outside if the cladding will permit it."