A Comprehensive Guide to the Building Safety Act 2022

The Building Safety Act 2022 redefines how high-rise buildings are designed, built, and managed. Learn about the core changes driving safety, transparency, and accountability in modern block management, covering new Duty Holder roles, the Golden Thread, and the Gateway system.

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One of the most notable changes to block management legislation is the Building Safety Act 2022. Introduced in response to the tragic Grenfell Tower fire in 2017, it sets strict rules for designing, constructing, and managing buildings, in particular, high-risk buildings.

For block managers, freeholders, and managing agents, the Act not only is aimed at raising construction standards, but also brings ongoing duties, new roles and responsibilities, and tougher accountability that affect the day-to-day block management.

Background

In May 2018, the UK government commissioned a review of the building regulations and fire safety, known as the Hackitt review. This found that the provisions for high-rise and complex buildings were inadequate and not fit for purpose, identifying a number of failures.

Following this report, the Welsh government conducted a review outlining Wales-specific building safety reforms, on top of the Building Safety Act 2022. They then published the Building Safety (Description of Higher-Risk Building) (Design and Construction Phase) (Wales) Regulations 2023, which came into force on 1st January 2024.

What does the Building Safety Act 2022 Cover?

High-Risk Buildings

The Act introduces a new category of High-Risk Buildings (HRBs), defined as residential buildings that are:

  • At least 18 meters high, or
  • At least seven storeys, and
  • Contain two or more residential units

Duty Holders

It established Duty Holders, who hold new responsibilities during the design, construction, and occupation stages:

  • Clients
  • Building owners
  • Principal Designer
  • Principal Contractor

These individuals or organisations carry legal responsibility for ensuring building safety throughout the building’s lifecycle and are now criminally responsible to ensure that any building work carried out is compliant, subject to the Building Regulations.

Three Regulatory Bodies

It creates three new bodies to ensure there is effective oversight of the new regime:

  • The Building Safety Regulator
  • The National Regulator of Construction Products
  • The New Homes Ombudsman

The Building Safety Regulator (BSR)

Oversees the safety and performance of all buildings, with a special focus on HRBs. The government states this will promote competence and organisation within the sector and help the coordination of all parties involved in the building process (professionals and tradespeople).

The Building Safety Act has created a specific process for the building of a HRBs. Building work in HRBs must go through a Gateway process involving the Building Safety Regulator. Before work can begin, all planning must be approved by the BSR.

The National Construction Products Regulator

Oversees the construction products regulatory regime more effectively and leads market surveillance and enforcement in the UK sector. They are responsible for taking enforcement action according to current regulations.

The New Homes Ombudsman Scheme

Homeowners of new-build homes can escalate complaints to the New Homes Ombudsman. Developers of new-builds will be required to become members of the Ombudsman with sanctions in place for breaches of the requirements.

The Golden Thread

The Golden Thread of information, or the building’s Safety Case contains all data relating to the safety of a HRB. It provides a verified, comprehensive record covering the entire lifecycle of the building, from its construction to current operation. This is aimed at preventing confusion caused by outdated, inconsistent, or missing information. The Golden Thread must be accurate, up to date, secure, and instantly available to residents and regulators when needed.

During the building's occupation, the responsibilities lie under these two roles:

  • Principal Accountable Person (PAP): An individual, partnership or corporate body. They are responsible for leading and coordinating the golden thread and keeping it up-to-date, accurate, and accessible.
  • Other Accountable Persons (OAPs): The OAPs follow the direction of the lead PAP. With buildings that already exist, the Accountable Person (AP) will need to be proactive about finding information to assess and manage safety risks of fire spread and structural stability to update the golden thread for the building.

The Three Gateways

The Gateway System introduces critical checkpoints at each stage of the process.

  • Gateway 1: A fire safety statement is mandatory from the start of the design and integral to planning permission being granted. The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is now the statutory consultee for planning applications for HRBs.
  • Gateway 2: Building control approval application stage for HRBs. Requires a detailed safety assessment of the building design, its functional elements according to building regulations, and how it will stay compliant, before construction begins.
  • Gateway 3: The BSR must approve the building is safe before residents can move in, and issue a completion certificate. This will require the ‘Golden Thread’ of the building information.

Conclusion

The Building Safety Act 2022 marks a fundamental shift in how high-risk residential buildings are designed, constructed, and managed. For block managers, freeholders, and managing agents, the Act introduces a far more rigorous and accountable safety regime. It prioritises a higher level of competence and transparency at every stage of a building’s lifecycle.

By establishing new duty holder roles, strengthening regulatory oversight, and introducing the Golden Thread and Gateway system, the Act ensures that building safety is proactively managed rather than reactively addressed. While compliance may require significant operational changes, it ultimately creates safer homes, clearer responsibilities, and stronger safeguards for residents.

As the new regulatory framework continues to roll out, an understanding of these obligations is vital and integrating the measures into day-to-day block management will ensure all stakeholders involved in the residential built environment stay compliant.

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FAQs

What's changed?

Previously design and construction overlapped, so construction could take place as design was still in progress. Now, the design must be finalised and approved before construction. This essentially ends the Design and Build model, moving towards a Design to Build model.

Competence is a big factor in the new act and anyone involved must prove they are competent to perform their role safely.

There is a greater focus on improving the competence of those responsible for each stage of the building process, with professionals having to take annual competency tests and exams to prove they are fit for the job.

When was the Act implemented?

The Act came into force on 1 October 2023 with secondary legislation commencing from this date. It applies to building safety regulations in England and Wales. Primary 

The new regime became fully operational on 6 April 2024, following a six-month transition period.

Building owners (PAPs) needed to register residential HRBs with the Building Safety Regulator by 1 October 2023. Failure to do so can result in face criminal prosecution.

Who are the main stakeholders?

The Act applies to a range of stakeholders across the sector and involved in the designing, construction, and occupation of buildings. These include:

  • Developers and contractors, who must embed compliance and fire safety into the design and constructions.
  • Landlords, freeholds, and building owners, who are responsible for the maintenance of safety standards in the building’s occupation.
  • Managing agents and property managers, who often carry out maintenance, compliance, and other safety-related duties on behalf of building owners.
  • Residents and leaseholders, who have new rights in regards to access to building safety information (the Golden Thread) and to be consulted on key issues that affect their home.

Stakeholders at each stage of the building lifecycle have new roles and responsibilities which are aimed at improving overall transparency and accountability.

Are there other regulations that coincide with the Building Safety Act 2022?

Yes, the Building Safety Act is part of a broader regulatory framework in the UK aimed at improving building and fire safety standards and practices. Other key pieces of legislation include:

Who is responsible for maintaining the Golden Thread?

The client has primary responsibility for the Golden Thread. During the design and construction phases, the principal designers and principal contractors have access to and are responsible for maintaining it.

What is the HSE?

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is Britain’s national regulator for workplace health and safety.

The Building Safety Act 2022 named the HSE as the new Building Safety Regulator in England.