End UK "desk top studies"
Ending the promiscuity of purchased "desk top studies" for the external wall was an early lesson learned from construction industry arguments that followed Grenfell Tower fire on 14 June 2017.
BDM01 – A to Z of Essential Principles for the protection of buildings Version 3 - 2023 in Principle D.8 had uncontroversially recommended to insurers that:
"No reliance is made on “desk top studies” as Building Control Alliance (BCA) Technical Guidance Note 18 Use of Combustible Cladding Materials on Buildings Exceeding 18m in Height, which is not approved by the Secretary of State."
BDM01 Version 3 was published following BCA TGN 18 revisions in June 2015, in September 2018 after a Circular Letter from the Ministry that contradicted the BCA view and declined to endorse "desk top studies", and in October 2019.
BCA TGN 18 was thankfully withdrawn in March 2022. No promised "update" has been published. Perhaps BCA TGN 18 will remain withdrawn until the Grenfell Tower Inquiry reports early in 2024, or indefinitely.
The "desk top studies" TGN 18 invented in 2014 never had the "imprimatur of the government". Neither did the BCA view of Section 12 in Volume 2 of Approved Document Part B (2006 as amended 2010 and 2013) in TGN 18 ever receive endorsement by the Secretary of State. It did not prompt amendment of statutory guidance under Section 6 of the Building Act 1984.
https://assets.grenfelltowerinquiry.org.uk/documents/transcript/Transcript%208%20February%202022.pdf
BCA “desk top studies” are certainly not the same as BS 9414:2019 Fire performance of external cladding systems. The application of results from BS 8414-1 and BS 8414-2 tests. That additional standard was developed by the British Standards Institute (BSI) post-Grenfell.
BS 9414 assessments using BS 8414 system test results with the 2013 Third Edition of BRE BR 135 Fire performance of external thermal insulation for walls of multistorey buildings assessment reports may neither be considered Extended Field of Application (EXAP) assessment reports, nor technical assessments to the Passive Fire Protection Forum (PFPF) guidance.
BS 8414 system testing has many variables, so the veracity of extrapolations or interpolations is unclear. BS 9414 has advocates, but it may be little used.
Moreover, BRE BR 135 has not been updated to keep up with BS 8414 and BS 9414 development. The BRE and BSI are not currently aligned.
Meanwhile, some specialists are trying to revive support for other "desk top studies" developed through the Passive Fire Protection Forum (PFPF).
A useful airing of the controversial issue comes from Chris Miles, the Commercial Director at the FPA, who argues for "Desktop Studies: a new way forward" in the August/September edition of Fire and Risk Management (F&RM) magazine, Page 12 to 15. "The Passive Fire Protection Issue".
F&RM is only available to FPA members, and is copyright.
The F&RM article does not mention Essential Principle D.8. It does not mention the FPA's free to download BDM01 A to Z of Essential Principles, which certainly for property protection, but also for health and life safety, recognised the PFPF guidance in 10.20 Principle T – Procure Quality Materials, on Page 240.
The PFPF produces guidance on undertaking fire engineering assessments, originally developed by the Fire Test Study Group (FTSG) in 2000. This guidance addresses both the complexity of the assessment and the competence level of the assessor in training and experience, but is limited to products:
The Fire Sector Federation (FSF) supports the PFPF, with its origins in the FTSG.
The list of trade associations supporting the PFPF guidance on undertaking technical assessments is substantial and may change. It is important to note that any differences between these dated PFPF guides should be considered when reading the legacy of fire engineering assessments. The 2021 FSF-PFPF referred to both Volumes of Approved Document Part B (2019 as amended 2020) as statutory guidance:
The statutory guidance was amended in 2022, and the 2021 FSF-PFPF is referenced in both Volumes of Approved Document Part B (2019 as amended 2020 and 2022), approved by the Secretary of State under Section 6 of the Building Act 1984. The Secretary of State having changed, with the Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) being renamed the Department for Levelling-Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC).
The statutory guidance references the Association for Specialist Fire Protection (ASFP), and the 2021 FSF-PFPF Guide to undertaking technical assessments of fire performance of construction products based on fire test evidence – Industry Standard Procedure does have the "imprimatur of the government" under Section 6 of the Building Act 1984.
The specific reference to technical assessments was introduced in 2019, while Approved Document Part B (2006 as amended 2010 and 2013) had a general reference to "best practice" from the Passive Fire Protection Federation, rather than Forum. The change from Federation to Forum is 2019 at the latest, and may be indicative of a corporate restructuring. Names change within acronyms.
While the BCA TGN 18 was being examined in Grenfell Tower Inquiry, and although revised eventually withdrawn, PFPF technical assessments were approved explicitly by the Ministry. So that in 2022 Approved Document Part B Fire Safety Appendix B is unequivocal in Paragraph B1c., extending to B5.
Chris Miles in the F&RM article notes that instead of the widespread use of Assessments In Lieu Of Fire Tests (AILOTs) from 2000, the PFPF now talks about technical assessments based on fire test evidence. The "Desktop Studies" F&RM article stresses that technical assessments are unacceptable without fire tests being undertaken within the 2021 FSF-PFPF discipline.
Adding:
"It should also be remembered that a positive assessment is not always possible".
Quite right. An assessment fee should not guarantee a "yes". There should be a refusal where the untested construction proposed is considered unsafe by someone competent to undertake the technical assessment according to complexity. Being refused is the measure of the rigour of the process.
Contractors that exceeded test reports in their construction, whether based in National or European standards, often sought to pay for an AILOT in the hope that the built work might be accepted under the contract. This could descend into attempts to purchase project variations from tested construction products and systems when under pressure on programme.
Manufacturers might have sought an AILOT or now seek a technical assessment to interpolate between test results in a range of comparable variations, or to extrapolate test results into a new application. The approach might be proactive or reactive in the market, and means that every incremental variant is not physically tested. It is easy to see why manufacturers would want to act competitively as a company, rather than through standards committees.
The scope of technical assessments envisaged by 2021 FSF-PFPF guide is wide.
Though it is not clear where the ambition of technical assessors would cease.
An AILOT in the past, or a technical assessment today is responsive precisely because built work on a project frequently varies from the design, whether or not the design was adequate, or requires an engineering effort by others that would delay a programme. Contractors under pressure would much prefer their practical problems to be administered away. The meaning of the excluded "fire engineering evaluations" is not explained in the 2021 FSF-PFPF. The range of complexity also goes beyond individual products to consider systems:
For AILOTs after 2000 the range of complexity was "simple", "intermediate" and "complex". The 2021 FSF-PFPF needs reconsidering after the Building Safety Act 2022. Meanings in law may be rather different in 2023. Better alignment might be achieved with the secondary legislation that is being activated.
The technical assessment habit gets most tricky when National BS 476 rated products and systems are unwisely mixed-and-matched with those with BS EN 13501 series classes. The wisdom of adopting the stronger European series informed BDM01 2023. As Paragraph B3 in Appendix B to both Volumes of Approved Document Part B (2019 as amended 2020 and 2022) says:
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The observation that "... assessments should be regarded as a way to avoid a test where one is necessary" is a commercial tension. The assessor might consider that more variants should have been physically tested within a range to improve the basis for interpolation, or that extrapolation was reaching too far. It is necessary to judge whether "... sufficient relevant test evidence is available."
Paragraph B3 is otherwise understating the issue with "... test standards which have different classification criteria". They have different methods, and are not comparable in the effort to interpolate or extrapolate.
The trouble in the UK since 2000 is that government continues to approve both National and European fire tests, even though they are not equivalents. That is like comparing the European apple to the National orange. It is not always the case, but in both reaction to fire and fire resistance testing the European tests that lead to classification in the BS EN 13501 series are superior to the BS 476 series. Not perfect, but to be preferred because stronger, or more informative because better able to distinguish characteristics in construction products.
By March 2023 government had consulted on a full and long overdue transition away from the National BS 476 series of tests. They sought belated simplification of the market, that could have been achieved in 2002, 2006, 2010 or 2013 when Part B of the Approved Documents as statutory guidance were amended.
The "Desktop Studies" F&RM article does not explain how the European approach of Direct Field of Application (DIAP) testing and classification under the BS EN 13501 series is different to the 2021 FSF-PFPF discipline for the BS 476 series. Currently EXAP reports shall be strictly produced to BS EN 15725:2023 Extended application on the fire performance of construction products and building elements: Principle of EXAP standards and EXAP reports. Based on DD CEN/TS 15117:2005 Guidance on direct and extended application.
In a pre-Brexit UK there was a parallel coupling of:
Government is right to want to abandon the inferior BS 476 series, shown also to be fatally flawed in Parts by the Grenfell Tower Inquiry, and should have made that transition after 2000. But government did not commit to the BS EN 13501 series, for reasons that must be better explained than they are so far in 2023.
It is important to understand the perceived need for technical assessments in 2023 is no good reason for postponing the full transition from BS 476.
Government arguably had the pre-Brexit responsibility to withdraw the weaker BS 476 series. Why BS 476 was sustained is as yet unexplained by officialdom.
Government has the post-Brexit power to both withdraw the weaker BS 476 series tests, and, where EXAP rules to BS EN 15725:2023 do not exist, to approve a UK technical assessment discipline. While the decision to abandon BS 476 is pending, Paragraph B4 in Appendix B to both Volumes of Approved Document Part B (2019 as amended 2020 and 2022) approves the 2021 FSF-PFPF:
The 2021 FSF-PFPF guide makes the point about BS EN 15725:
But the version of BS EN 15725 referred to is out of date. It is BS EN 15725:2023 that should be referred to, not the 2010 version that was current in 2021.
Of course, the simple answer is to fully develop EXAP rules for all construction product manufacturing sectors. However, that process is mired in Europe. Many of the required EXAP rules have been established in the two decades since BS EN 13501 was published after 2000, following development of better DIAP fire tests in the 1990s. The approachable ideal is for EXAP rules to be sufficient.
But where EXAP rules are lacking, perhaps because of the intransigence of the construction product manufacturing sector itself, the Secretary of State could directly approve a UK technical assessment discipline. Not simply refer to the 2021 FSF-PFPF guide, but define technical assessment in AD-B.
The FSF-PFPF guidance could be made redundant by it, or a (hopefully stronger) version of it, being incorporated into statutory guidance for those diminishing instances when EXAP rules are not published. End "desk top studies" by UK technical assessment discipline directly under Section 6 of the Building Act 1984.
Or the Secretary of State could publish dedicated UK EXAP rules, and ignore the technical assessment route entirely. End "desk top studies" by UK EXAP.
Either way, the BS 476 series should be consigned to the dustbin of history.
Of course, the government could simply abandon BS 476 entirely, with little to no further transition period, and not worry too much about the few construction product manufacturing sectors that have for some reason failed to use the last 20 years to establish the EXAP rules they now say they need. That would be to ignore appeals for technical assessments as "desktop studies", giving the problem to construction product manufacturers.
Which would not be too problematic for the UK construction industry. As BDM01 notes in 10.20 Principle T – Procure Quality Materials:
"The best manufacturers commit to full disclosure of DIAP testing and provide EXAP assessment within the limits to confidentiality set by investors in a building. The very best manufacturers offer full public disclosure knowing they are market leaders with techniques in manufacture their competitors are unable to match."
End UK "desk top studies", and abandon the BS 476 series. If there are no EXAP rules across Europe, the UK needs to develop its own when adopting (with or without National variation) the European tests that find classification under the BS EN 13501 series. Failing that, insist that competent professionals practicing individually, or the officers of any company employing them, are undertaking a personal liability when PFPF technical assessments are signed. With Paragraph B5 in Appendix B to both Volumes of Approved Document Part B (2019 as amended 2020 and 2022) appreciating the necessary expertise:
Paragraph B2 appreciating the detail:
The significant influence on performance passing without mention in Appendix B to both Volumes of Approved Document Part B (2019 as amended 2020 and 2022) being that BS 476 and BS EN 13501 series are not equivalent. That has to be resolved by the Secretary of State at the Ministry, as a fundamental problem prior to any "small differences" in detail, by removing BS 476 from AD-B.
This has to be of concern to the Professional Indemnity Insurers of technical assessors. The 2021 FSF-PFPF is correct on PII:
However, PII might be needed by individuals, including those lacking legal protection as an officer of an organisation. It is time to simplify the legally consequential assessment process by ending the confusion between National and European tests. Thereafter, technical assessment can be disciplined, and the signed declaration that is expected will be based on the BS EN 13501 series.
This is an extract of the signed declaration clauses. They need to be understood in full as a commitment. The signed declaration title is annoying in that task, as it talks of "engineering evaluations", even though "fire engineering evaluations" were explicitly excluded from the 2021 FSF-PFPF scope.
This appears to be a hangover from AILOTs in 2000 that talked of "engineering evaluations", but has no place in 2021 FSF-PFPF scope. A needless confusion, but important to resolve, as this is the title of the signed declaration that may be relied upon in future. To be submitted in a Regulation 38 Fire Safety Information exchange, or for a definition of "Higher-Risk Buildings" at Gateway 3.
The technical assessment will be significant to the "Responsible Person" under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, as clarified by the Fire Safety Act 2021, and the "(Principal) Accountable Person" under the Building Safety Act 2022. It will be significant to the "Principal Contractor" approaching Handover at Work Stage 6 in the RIBA Plan of Work 2020. As it will be to the Fire and Rescue Services when the building is to be occupied.
It may be a fee to the technical assessor, but huge costs to several commercially interested parties may depend upon the technical assessment being reliable. The technical assessment in the absence of EXAP rules is too important an aspect of statutory guidance to be delegated by the Secretary of State.
The delegation of technical assessments through the 2021 FSF-PFPF only occurs in the statutory guidance. The concession has no legal presence in the Building Regulations 2010, and is absent from Regulation 7. Whereas it was Regulation 7 amendments in the Building (Amendment) Regulations 2018 that ended the option of BS 8414 in "Relevant Buildings", and consequently stopped the abuse of BCA invented "desk top studies".
With the Building etc. (Amendment) (England) Regulations 2022 decisively ending any market for the most combustible Metal Composite Material (MCM) in the external wall. Though ignoring many other combustible options.
The attention of regulators after Grenfell Tower fire was on the reaction to fire of the external wall, which for the isolated tower involved no fire resistance under any legislation after 1965 or statutory guidance after 1985. The Grenfell Tower Inquiry and the Metropolitan Police looked at fire resistance internally with some attention paid to BS 476 Part 22 Fire Doors. However, the wider uses of the sustained BS 476 series went largely unexplored, and there was no public examination of technical assessments in the construction industry.
If not a pressing matter for inclusion in the Building Regulations themselves, or for the statutory guidance that also flows from Part B of the Schedule 1 Requirements, competency for technical assessment when interpolating between or extrapolating from only the European and no longer the National fire tests, could be addressed through BSI Flex 8670 Built environment – Core criteria for building safety in competence frameworks – Code of practice.
The Fire Sector Federation (FSF) might sharpen up the PFPF guide, and it will be worth checking liabilities against legislation as it is established and applied. The FSF need not wait for the final Grenfell Tower Inquiry report in early 2024.
What is needed is an end to "desk top studies", and no UK market for technical assessments in the absence of EXAP rules without legal consequences.
Otherwise, what has been learned?
Technical Designer
1 年Let's be clear. Desk Top Studies were a racket. Not so for technical assessments undertaken to either PFPF (in the absence of any other National standard) or European Field of Application discipline. But the decision to sustain BS 476 series meant the BS EN 13501 series rigour was undermined in the UK market regardless of being part of the European Union regime of the (voluntary) Construction Products Directive after 1989 and the (mandatory) Construction Products Regulation after 2013. When the reality known by government in the two RADAR reports of 2000 became increasingly apparent for any products after 2013 that had a European Product Standard. Necessarily showing up in the legal Declaration of Performance. Those able to hide behind the BS 476 standard could continue with National (Class 0 for surfaces or FD ratings for fire doors) avoiding the more rigorous European testing and certification. Then RADAR was published by Grenfell Tower Inquiry in 2022.
Experienced latent defects and home warranty underwriter.
1 年From an underwriting perspective I'd be rather sceptical of relying on a PFPF technical assessment as they seem vulnerable to the same flaw as previous desktop assessments of fire performance (a manufacturer not wanting to incur the substantial costs of multiple fire tests in different configurations willing to shop around for an opinion that supports their ability to sell more of their product). Approved Doc B still remains open to interpretation as to whether adequate test evidence exists to support such a technical assessment, so insurers could find themselves in the position of having accepted an assessment and later being challenged as to whether that assessment is actually compliant. The FCA's Principles could then support that challenge resulting in a valid claim given the consumer is relying upon their decision (Principles 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 12 could all come into play). https://www.handbook.fca.org.uk/handbook/PRIN/2/1.html
Technical / Training Associate Director - Our system has a number of benefits over 9251 sprinkler systems ? 80% less water ? Easy to retrofit ? No Tank ? UKAS ? BS 8458 Compliant ? All opinions expressed are my own
1 年What allowance for failure to perform (passive or active systems) are included?
Leading Firefighter @ London Fire Brigade, Teaching Fellow in Disaster & Emergency Management @ Coventry University, Researcher.
1 年??
Associate Director at DAY Architectural Ltd
1 年Great article, Ian.