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Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 2: Historic Fires, Class 0 Failures, BS 8414 Shortcomings and Government Oversight—Legal Implications for UK Building Safety (Part 1)

Published on: 25 September 2024

Published by a LexisNexis Construction expert
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Introduction

The Phase 2 report of the Grenfell Tower Inquiry, released on 4 September 2024 (the report), builds upon the analysis from Phase 1, centring on the devastating fire of 14 June 2017. While the first phase forensically charted what unfolded on the night itself, Phase 2 sought to explain how a concrete block, assumed to be fire-resistant in 21st-century London, could become a lethal inferno. The report sets out a series of institutional and individual shortcomings that, taken together, culminated in the tragedy. Over time, the panel’s composition changed, with new members and assessors appointed, ensuring a wide range of expertise and viewpoints informed the investigation. Phase 2 proceeded in a disciplined, methodical fashion, echoing Phase 1 to permit rigorous scrutiny. The Inquiry convened for 312 sitting days; hearings began in January 2020 but were intermittently halted by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Nevertheless, proceedings continued via remote conferencing. To uphold transparency, all evidence, witness statements, and related documents were placed in the public domain...

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