Digital Construction

Balfour Beatty v Broadway Malyan: the challenge of retrieving historic information

Image: 166641312 © Sayan Moongklang | Dreamstime.com
Balfour Beatty’s failed legal attempt to compel Broadway Malyan to retrieve documents relating to a building completed 13 years ago highlights the issues not only that information management can address in construction, but also the challenges around its retrospective application to the existing built environment.

The matter concerns the six-storey Hive building in London’s Bethnal Green. Mansell Construction won the contract to build the Hive in 2008, six years prior to the contractor being taken over by Balfour Beatty. Broadway Malyan won the role of architect and its appointment was then novated to Mansell.

In June 2021, the current owner of the building, Hive Bethnal Green Limited, issued a claim against Balfour Beatty over the cladding on the building.

Balfour Beatty’s solicitors subsequently wrote to Broadway Malyan’s solicitors in January this year, saying they were keen to understand the background of the case. They asked for: “All work products such as drawings, designs, specifications, the original appointment of your client (signed version), site inspections records (relating to the façade and related works), the fire strategy report/equivalent, and the letter issued to JG Colts [the original developer]/the employer on final inspection of the works.”

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