In a landmark legal ruling, the government has secured a court order compelling a multibillion-pound pension fund’s property business to finally remediate dangerous fire safety defects in a residential tower block. The judgment marks a major victory for leaseholders caught in holdups over who should pay for essential cladding and safety repairs.
Escalating Dispute Over Stevenage High-Rise
The case centers on Vista Tower, a high-rise apartment building in Stevenage owned by freeholder Grey GR. Despite fire hazards first being identified back in 2019, Grey GR – a subsidiary ultimately controlled by Railpen’s £34 billion pension scheme for railway workers – had failed to initiate comprehensive remediation works to make the building safe.
As the impasse dragged on, with leaseholders facing disruption, uncertainty and diminished property values, the government’s Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) took the exceptional step of launching legal action last October under new Building Safety Act powers.
Court Tips Scales in Residents’ Favor
Following a March trial, the Court has now ruled decisively in the government’s favor. It will issue a legally binding ‘Remediation Order’ compelling Grey GR to resolve the fire safety deficiencies at Vista Tower according to a strict, court-mandated timeline and work plan.
“This decision is a victory for leaseholders…who have lived with uncertainty for far too long,” said Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove. “It should serve as a warning to all building owners – if you fail to fix your unsafe buildings, we will see you in court.”
Building Safety Issues Identified at Vista Tower |
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– Flammable cladding |
– Missing fire breaks |
– Inadequate fire alarm and smoke ventilation |
For leaseholders like Sophie Bichener, who has been ensnared in the dispute, the judgment brings overwhelming relief.
“This gives us the reassurance we deserve…and hope to many others waiting for freeholders to do the right thing,” she said.
Broader Implications for Property Owners
The Vista Tower case was the government’s first legal test of its new Building Safety Act enforcement powers against recalcitrant property owners. Its success could have wide-ranging impacts, with DLUHC now pursuing Remediation Orders against Grey GR for 5 other buildings where remediation has stalled.
Railpen itself – which manages pension investments for rail industry workers – may also come under heightened scrutiny from its beneficiaries over its investment arm’s handling of the cladding crisis across its portfolio of flatted residential properties.
“It is hugely disappointing that Railpen…has kept leaseholders in limbo in this way,” said Gove. “Railway workers with their pensions invested in this fund deserve better.”
The Fallout Continues
While a hard-fought win for the government and flat owners, the case exposes the complex web of ownership, liability and financing challenges still to be resolved in the building safety scandal.
Grey GR has already initiated some remediation works at Vista Tower in the run-up to the trial. But with the Remediation Order soon setting a legally binding completion deadline, the risk of potential further court sanction against Grey’s parent companies now looms if delays continue.
The Human Cost
For affected leaseholders, while a path to safety has finally emerged, challenging years of revised construction timelines, decanted living, and uncertainty over future costs still likely lie ahead.
The wider property industry, meanwhile, would be wise to take heed of Gove’s warning that “we will not stop until we secure justice for leaseholders” impacted by this tragic crisis.
More details on the DLUHC’s building safety program can be found here.
Sources: THX News & Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.