Replacing BS476, the European rating system EN13501-1 was updated in 2018 in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire. Crucially, the revised system splits the best performing rating into A1 and A2 categories. This has caused confusion, especially within the powder coated aluminium cladding sector, according to Gillian Thomson, general manager of MSP.
MSP makes bespoke powder-coated aluminium panels and has been part of the Vivalda Group since last year.
Gillian Thomson said: 鈥淚n recent months, we鈥檙e seeing signs that over-specification is becoming a real issue within the building industry. In practice, both A1 and A2 classifications are more than adequate for high rise projects. The trouble is that too many developers, insurers and specifiers have not taken the trouble to read and fully understand the regulations and so are not confident about interpreting and following them. In practice, this can lead to a form of Chinese whispers along the supply chain, with calls from the developers for 鈥楢1 or nothing鈥 when it comes to cladding.
鈥淲hile this A1 mantra sounds laudable in principle, in practice this is causing problems further down the constriction supply chain. In fact, this is forcing some suppliers to cut corners to get an A1 rating that in our 25 years鈥 experience cannot be achieved with a PPC coated aluminium sheet. Taking the coating from the recommended minimum of 60碌 to 20碌 is one route some suppliers have taken to achieve a zero score on the smoke test, pushing it from an A2 to an A1 rating.
鈥淭his approach, however, leads to problems of quality further down the down. Firstly, the PPC coating simply will not perform in the way it was designed to. The colour and gloss will be dull and inconsistent. Furthermore, within a few years wear and tear will take its toll, creating a shoddy exterior 鈥 certainly not lasting the 25 years as required.
鈥淎nother way we鈥檝e seen some suppliers achieve A1 rating on PPC cladding is to test it via a specific category within EN13501 reserved solely for 鈥榥on-substantial parts鈥. Combining other standards such as EN11925 and ISO 1716 calorific value test, this route essentially omits the EN1182 combustibility test 鈥 enabling it to gain the A1 rating.聽聽聽
鈥淲hile this approach may be within the letter of the law, we are not convinced it is the best way for an industry to maintain trust and credibility. The desire for A1 PPC (when A2 rated cladding is perfectly safe) may be driven by insurers鈥 attitudes to perceived risk, but this well-intentioned objective is placing unrealistic pressure on some parts of the cladding 蝉别肠迟辞谤.鈥
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