The latest data from the Regulator of Social Housing on fire safety remediation is concerning. More than a quarter of the social housing blocks identified by landlords as having serious fire safety defects are not expected to be remediated before 2030. These are not projections based on future uncertainties — these buildings have already been identified as defective, and the timeline for fixing them extends beyond five years.
Since Grenfell, the primary focus has understandably been on external wall systems and cladding, and this focus is justified. However, external wall defects are interconnected with other building elements. Cladding remediation often causes significant disruptions to the building’s structure, including scaffolding, penetrations through floors and walls, and work in roof spaces and service voids. Each of these activities poses a risk to internal compartmentation if not carefully managed. A building with new cladding but unresolved fire-stopping breaches has not fully addressed its fire safety concerns.
The fire protection components within these buildings — including penetration seals, intumescent products, fire door integrity, and compartment wall continuity — must be continuously assessed and maintained in conjunction with the external remediation efforts. They should not be viewed as a separate workstream to be addressed later. Building safety cases now require documented evidence that covers the entire fire strategy, not just the aspects that received the most focus immediately after Grenfell.
For buildings that will not meet the 2030 deadline, the priority should be to identify specific deficiencies and develop a structured remediation plan. This involves assessing the current state of fire stopping, compartmentation, and fire doors—rather than assuming they are acceptable just because external works are in progress.
“New cladding on the outside and a mess of fire-stopping breaches internally is not a safe building — it’s a building with a new coat. I’ve been on enough of these surveys to know the internal picture is nearly always worse than the landlord thinks it is. These buildings that aren’t hitting 2030 need to get a proper compartmentation survey done now and start working through it. Waiting around isn’t an option when people are living in there.”
— Perry Winch, Managing Director, Spectra Holdings
Industry News &
Insights
Updates, insights and practical perspectives on the challenges and changes affecting our clients and the sectors we work in.

300,000 Potentially Contaminated UK Sites — and Most Don’t Have Adequate Records
Research published in 2026 has highlighted the extent to which contaminated industrial sites across England remain inadequately documented. For developers working on brownfield land, the practical consequences of that gap are well understood.
Find out moreThe HSE’s Asbestos Consultation Has Closed — Here’s What the Proposed Changes Mean in Practice
The HSE’s public consultation on strengthening asbestos regulations closed in January 2026, with analysis and any proposed legislative changes expected in the coming months. Some of the proposals have direct practical implications for duty holders, building owners and anyone commissioning asbestos work.

65% of Social Housing Fire Doors Are Failing — And the Inspection Records Make It Worse
A national study has found that nearly two-thirds of fire doors in social housing across England don’t meet the legal minimum standard. The inspection data reveal that the gap between obligation and reality is even wider than the headlines suggest.

The UK Net Zero Buildings Standard Is Here. Most Buildings Aren’t Close to Meeting It.
The construction industry has recently introduced a unified UK Net Zero Carbon Buildings Standard, with official certification expected from Q2 2026. It’s a significant milestone — but for most of the existing UK building stock, the gap between current performance and the standard remains substantial.

Our Core
Services
At Spectra, we provide trusted, compliant solutions across asbestos, demolition, fire protection, remediation, and construction services — delivered safely and efficiently nationwide.
Why Choose
Spectra
With nationwide response, independent professional advice, and a qualified, experienced team, Spectra provides the confidence and capability your projects need. Our commitment is clear — to deliver safe, compliant, and cost-effective results every time.
Contact Spectra today — for trusted expertise in asbestos, demolition, fire protection, and environmental safety.








