COMBUSTIBLE cladding like that used on Grenfell Tower is not used on Rugby’s tower blocks, Rugby Borough Council (RBC) has reiterated.
On Monday (June 26), a meeting of RBC’s cabinet heard that the five multi-storey blocks owned and maintained by the council – comprising 313 flats in total – do not have cladding of a type that would cause a fire risk.
The blocks at Rounds Gardens and Biart Place were built in 1965. Blocks at Biart Place have no cladding beyond the concrete panels they were built with.
Rounds Gardens blocks had a brick and fibreglass skin added in 1985, but tests undertaken last week found these were fire-proof and installed correctly, with no air gap.
The council’s cabinet requested an urgent update after the fire at Grenfell, and evidence provided in response shows that the blocks are designed to contain fires in compartments, and that subsequent work to individual flats and to the blocks as a whole has made sure that the compartments should still contain fires as designed.
Improvements to fire doors and meter cabinets have introduced further fire safety protection. In addition, sprinklers have been installed in the bin storage areas and a comprehensive CCTV system monitors stairways and landings.
Tenants received up-to-date fire safety information as recently as February this year, while further copies have been provided on request. The latest copy of Tenant Times, the newsletter distributed free of charge to all council tenants, includes a special feature on fire safety and highlights the need for residents to keep communal areas, escape routes and fire exits clear.
RBC communities and homes spokeswoman Coun Emma Crane said: “Residents are rightly concerned about their flats following the disaster at Grenfell Tower, and we have moved quickly to reassure residents that the design and ongoing maintenance and regular checks of our tower blocks will keep our tenants safe.
“The evidence provided to councillors shows that the work we have done to the blocks has not affected the fire-proof compartments that are fundamental to their safety.
“The findings of our initial review are reassuring but we are in the process of carrying out a completely new fire safety audit of our properties with the fire service to see if there’s more that we should do.”
Details of the report and its findings can be found on the council website at www.rugby.gov.uk, with the agenda papers for the cabinet meeting held on 26 June 2017.
