Digital Construction

How to comply with the golden thread the UCL way

UCL's Cruciform building
UCL's Cruciform building in London (image: 138668660 © Alberto Zamorano | Dreamstime.com)
The Building Safety Act brings new duties on clients and their teams, including maintaining a golden thread of information in higher risk buildings through design, construction to handover. Margaret Sackey, capital projects health and safety manager at University College London, explains how the university is preparing for it and associated new legislation.

The government is consulting on proposals for clients and their design and construction and management teams to comply with the golden thread on projects – especially those involving higher-risk residential buildings. The Building Safety Act introduces these requirements, but the government revealed more details in July as part of a range of consultations around its implementation.

A golden thread of information will mean that those responsible for the management of in-scope buildings will need to ensure that easily accessible, reliable, up-to-date and accurate information is available both during design and construction phases. And that it is packaged together for when the building needs to be handed over.

In anticipation of this requirement, clients’ procurement and project teams have already been working within their own organisations to improve data management in preparation for compliance, while more details emerge.

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