The construction industry has acknowledged that it must deal with the risk of fire in multistorey timber-frame construction after the publication of the London Fire Brigade’s initial findings on the catastrophic fire at Colindale, north London, in July.
Ȧ revealed last week that part of the timber-frame development burned to the ground in nine minute.
This week, Dave Mitchell, technical director at the Home Builders Federation, said: “We need to sort this out. If something needs to be done we should do it with housebuilders, the Health and Safety Executive and the timber-frame industry.”
Colin Mitchell, divisional director for housing at contractor Geoffrey Osbourne, said his firm recognised the risk of fire in timber-framed projects and had mitigated it.
He said staircases were a particular hazard as their undersides were not fire protected until board was fixed to their undersides.
Brendan Ritchie, innovations director at Willmott Dixon, said: “We tend not to do multistorey timber frame. We tend to use steel – there’s less fire risk and it has better dimensional stability.”
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