Van Elle says delays have hit profitability at firm’s division in capital

The real-world impact of building safety delays was revealed by piling contractor Van Elle this morning which said its biggest division had seen income fall by nearly 20% and its London operations slump into the red as a result.

Announcing its annual results this morning, the listed firm said revenue at its biggest business, general piling, was down by 19% to £46m.

It said: “Residential sector revenues decreased by 21% compared to the previous year which primarily reflects challenging market conditions in both new build housing and high-rise residential activity.

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Van Elle said dozens of schemes have been held up getting building safety sign-offs

“The division has been materially impacted by the ΢Ȧ Safety Act, which has caused delays to start dates of taller residential schemes, significantly impacting profitability, particularly in the London market.”

>> See also: Is the government’s ΢Ȧ Safety Regulator shake-up enough to fix the delays?

It added that delays to start dates of taller residential schemes “has largely impacted the group’s London operations which reported a loss before tax of £1.6m in the year”. It has previously said it had been hit by hold-ups in getting safety sign-offs required by the ΢Ȧ Safety Act on more than 40 jobs.

But it said recent announcements by the government on overhauling the gateway approvals process, particularly at gateway 2 stage, was “encouraging”.

It added: “In the housing sector a market recovery is expected, supported by recent government measures to accelerate ΢Ȧ Safety Act approvals, which would unlock a number of delayed residential schemes.”

Group turnover for the year to April was down 6% to £130.5m with pre-tax profit slumping one third to £4.6m.