Sutton Central by-election
A by-election will take place on Thursday 10 April 2025 to elect a new local councillor in Sutton Central.
Significant new updates to the Building Regulations legislation have come into effect, which introduce changes to the Building Regulations application process, and impose duty holder responsibilities on applicants, agents, and builders.
The key changes are:
New duty holder roles and responsibilities are specified in the regulations for individuals involved in procuring, planning, designing, managing, and executing building projects. The goal is to place a stronger emphasis on complying with regulations for both design and construction work:
Emphasis on competence – having ‘appropriate skills, knowledge and behaviours’:
The overall responsibility to show compliance with the Building Regulations lies with the client, the principal designer, and the principal contractor.
Other notable changes that will affect your projects are:
Additional information is required to enable your application to be validated, including contact details for dutyholders and information about the project.
For new buildings and extensions this would usually be the date at which the foundations and ground floor structure is complete, or for other works a date and description of a point where 15% of the work is due to be complete.
You must notify building control when you start work on-site so we can carry out the necessary inspections. You must also notify Sutton council when works are ‘deemed commenced’ for buildings and extensions; this is when the foundations are constructed, and the structure of the lowest floor level is complete. For all other works, where 15% of the overall work has been constructed.
A notice of completion must be submitted to us within 5 days of the work being completed.
For projects that do not meet the definition of commencement within 3 years from when the building control approval was granted.
The Building Safety Act 2022 strengthens enforcement of building regulation breaches and enables local authorities and the Building Safety Regulator to issue compliance and stop notices where building regulations have been breached. Compliance notices will require specified remedial action by a set date. These changes apply to all building projects covered by the Building Regulations 2010, not just higher-risk buildings (HRBs).
The new duty holders introduced under the Building Regulations etc. (Amendment) (England) Regulations 2023 are:
There are also new duties placed on designers (including sole or lead designers) and contractors (including sole contractors). These roles are effective from 1 October 2023, The aim is to ensure that at each stage in a building project, duty holders are identified, and the roles, responsibilities and expectations are clear.
Duty holders must ensure they possess the necessary skills, knowledge, experience, and behaviour to carry out their design and construction work. They must also stay within the limits of their competence. Additionally, the client must take reasonable steps to confirm that the duty holders they appoint are competent, and duty holders themselves must decline appointments for work they aren't competent to handle. Duty holders are required to collaborate with other duty holders, coordinate their work, and share information with each other. It is possible for a duty holder to hold more than one duty-holding role, as long as they are competent to do so.
Client means any person for whom a project is carried out project means a project which includes or is intended to include any building work and includes all planning work, design work, management or other work involved in a project until the end of the construction phase.
The client’s duties cannot be subcontracted to a third party. Where there is more than one client, one person must be named as the client for the project.
The client must:
Domestic client means a client for whom a project is being carried out which is not in the course or furtherance of a business of that client:
Principal designer is a designer who is an organisation or individual (on smaller projects) appointed by the client to take control of the pre-construction phase of any project involving more than one contractor.
A principal designer must be appointed in writing before the construction phase begins, or for building control approval for a higher-risk building, before submitting an application.
You must:
plan, manage and monitor the design work during the design phase
take all reasonable steps to ensure the design work carried out by them and anyone under their control is planned, managed and monitored so that the design is such that, if built, it would comply with all relevant requirements of the building regulations
make sure that they, and all those working on the project, cooperate, communicate and coordinate their work with the client, the principal contractor, and other designers and contractors
liaise with the principal contractor and share information relevant to the building work
assist the client in providing information to designers
review the arrangements of any previous principal designer
notify building control in writing, where applicable, that the work is being carried out on behalf of a domestic client
where applicable, sign the declarations as referred to above in the client's duties when work is complete.
Designer means any person who in the course of a business:
(a) carries out any design work, or
(b) arranges for, or instructs, any person under their control to do so; (including a client, contractor or other person referred to in Part 2A of the Regulations)
You must:
Principal contractor is usually the main contractor and is appointed under Regulation 11D (principal designer and principal contractor) to perform the duties of a principal contractor where there is more than one contractor.
You must:
The contractor is any person including a client, but not a domestic client, who carries out, manages or controls any building work.
You must:
Duty holder notification
The duty holders involved in the construction phase (client, principal designer, principal contractor) must provide compliance declarations to Sutton building control confirming they have fulfilled their duties and that, to the best of their knowledge, the works comply with the building regulations.
The duty holder declaration form
A completed duty holder declaration form must be submitted to Sutton building control before a completion certificate can be issued.
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