How did Grenfell Tower fire start and is housing block still standing? | NationalWorld

2022-06-25 00:24:47 By : Ms. June Li

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Seventy-two people died in the Grenfell Tower disaster

Grenfell Tower was destroyed by a fire in 2017 and was one of the UK’s worst modern disasters. Seventy-two people died in the incident.

But how did the fire start and is the housing block still standing?

Here’s what you need to know.

Grenfell Tower in Kensington was part of the Lancaster West Estate, a social housing complex of almost 1,000 homes.

It was built in the 1970s, but had been recently renovated.

Just before 1am on 14 June in 2017, a fire broke out in the kitchen of a fourth floor flat at the 23 storey tower block in North Kensington, West London.

The fire had raced up the exterior of the building within just minutes, before spreading to all four sides. By 3am, most of the upper floors were on fire.

According to a provisional report by Dr Niamh Nic Daéid, director of the Leverhulme Research Centre for Forensic Science at Dundee University.

Occupant of the flat, Behailu Kebede, described being woken by the sound of a smoke alarm. He went into the kitchen and saw smoke in the area of the fridge-freezer and near the kitchen window, and immediately called the fire brigade.

The fire spread quickly upwards from the fourth floor and across the eastern side of the building.

It then spread across the north face of the tower.

In a report to the Grenfell Public Inquiry, fire safety engineer Dr Barbara Lane identified the fire spreading vertically up the tower columns and said it went "laterally along the cladding above and below the window lines (and) the panels between windows”.

Grenfell Tower had undergone a renovation where the addition of external cladding was made, consisting of aluminium sheets bonded to a central plastic (polyethylene) core.

Panels made from plastic and aluminium were installed on the sides of Grenfell Tower to make it warmer and drier.

Professor Luke Bisby, in his report to the public inquiry, said evidence "strongly supports" the theory that the polyethylene material in the cladding was the primary cause of the fire’s rapid spread.

The cladding has been blamed for helping flames to spread when fire broke, with hundreds of thousands of people currently living in buildings with similar cladding, which must now be removed at enormous cost, resulting in a crisis in building safety.

Grenfell Tower is set to be demolished over safety concerns, but as of yet its burned-out shell is still standing and is wrapped in protective plastic sheeting.

How to commemorate the site has not yet been decided and a criminal investigation by London’s Metropolitan Police is still going on, as is an independent public inquiry.

There will be a general debate on the fifth anniversary of the Grenfell Tower fire in the House of Commons chamber on 16 June 2022.

The subject for this debate was determined by the Backbench Business Committee.