Technical

Seddon raises safety standards on cladding project

Seddon Alfred Gunn House
Seddon had to add an external staircase to the middle tower block and demolish the corner of the tower to do so (Photograph: Osborne Photography)
The Building Safety Act and the Grenfell fire have put high-rise residential jobs in an uncomfortable spotlight. Kristina Smith meets the Seddon team refurbishing and recladding three residential towers in the West Midlands.

Recladding residential tower blocks is challenging for any contractor in the current climate. Tough new laws on fire safety and the Grenfell legacy mean such projects attract forensic levels of scrutiny. And with the legislative landscape still changing, construction teams must think on their feet.

This was the context for Seddon on the recladding and refurbishment of Alfred Gunn House in Oldbury for Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council in the West Midlands. And on top of the fire safety issues, there was the technical challenge of adding an external staircase to one of the three tower blocks and demolishing the corner to do so.

A key aspect was getting the risk allocation right, says Seddon regional director Rob Moore. “It is not only the project that’s the challenge, so too is getting the contractual details agreed and the risk management right from the start, at the pre-tender stage,” he explains.

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