The UK's National Audit Office (NAO) has reported that up to 60% of buildings with dangerous cladding in the country remain unidentified, and remediation within the government's portfolio is ...
Seven years after the Grenfell Tower fire exposed the scandal of unsafe cladding systems on buildings across the UK, the ...
The country’s tower block cladding crisis may take more than a decade and up to £16.6bn to resolve, according to a report ...
Three in five buildings with dangerous cladding have yet to be identified, according to a report by the National Audit Office ...
Independent spending watchdog, the National Audit Office, believes it will cost over £16bn to fix unsafe cladding on all ...
Building Safety Minister Alex Norris promises cladding removal work will speed up, as spending watchdog finds more than half ...
The government could miss its own cladding removal completion date if progress is not made to speed up the process, the UK's ...
Considerate Constructors Scheme says workers are reporting concerns over safety of materials used on new builds ...
Stalling developers, building safety regulator issues and squeezed social landlord finances mean the government is on track ...
Work to make England’s multistorey residential buildings safe from dangerous cladding could cost up to £22.4bn, the UK’s spending watchdog has revealed. The high-end estimate figure highlights the ...
However, with a potential 7,200 buildings or more — up to 60 per cent — still to be identified, the National Audit Office (NAO) warned that many people still do not know when their buildings will be ...
One of the country’s biggest housing associations has named the firms it will use to deliver a £300m programme of cladding retrofit projects.