There are apartment blocks up and down the country that are far worse. My father is a recently retired senior Fire Officer with Dublin Fire Brigade. He has told me several cases of entering a building and not being able to find fire escapes, exits blocked, doors locked or leading to a building site. Fire protection missing, minimal fire proofing between units, basically all that is between one apartment and another is a piece of plasterboard.
The only reason this story made front page headlines is that it happened in Dublin. If this happened in say Limerick, it would never have made even page 10.
If it happened in Leitrim, it would have made the headlines. Even the High Court Judge said this has never happened in modern Ireland.
I cant understand why DCC has to pick up the tab and make the arrangements for the unfortunate residents. Surely those involved in the construction of the apartments should be doing the running around and picking up the tab?
But it has happened before, at Rossorry Quay in Enniskillen. And with so little media attention at the time that a decade later, there are now only a few references to the scandal on google.co.uk or google.ie including one from the NI courts service and this BBC report.
Assuming this was a standard situation, then it is because they agree the level of service required with the client (i.e. developer) before the inspection - "do you want me to open up the walls or not?" - The answer here appears to have been no.Sounds like NAMA spotted it as well so what kind of inspection was done by the architects? I love their comment that they are not going to take a hammer and knock a hole in the wall. Why not??
The client (developer) obviously didn't want that - they only wanted a Cert. that was sufficient for sale. Perhaps the buyers of the apartments should have required that something greater than a visual inspection was undertaken as part of the terms of the contract for purchase of the apartments.Or at least monitor it as it being built.
Assuming this was a standard situation, then it is because they agree the level of service required with the client (i.e. developer) before the inspection - "do you want me to open up the walls or not?" - The answer here appears to have been no.
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I assume the judge was referring to Ireland the country, and not Ireland the islandThere is a difference. Actually there is a load of differences, not that certain people admit to them.
If the Rossorry Quay scandal hadn't been ignored by the establishment south of the border, then the judge would have been well aware of it, and perhaps the Priory Hall scandal wouldn't have happened.
Well, actually you can. The Fire Cert. will say "this was a visual inspection only and no opening up was undertaken". If that is insufficient for the buyer (or someone such as a solicitor on their behalf), they should say so before they buy the apartment.Exactly. You have a client that hasn't done the work so you ask them if they want you to open up the walls and they say no. Shock, horror! And then you hand out fire certs based on that. You can't blame buyers for this.
If the Rossorry Quay scandal hadn't been ignored by the establishment south of the border, then the judge would have been well aware of it, and perhaps the Priory Hall scandal wouldn't have happened.
"Architect Stephen Oppermann said yesterday his firm -- Oppermann and Associates, based at Foley Street in Dublin 1 -- carried out a visual inspection of Priory Hall after the apartments were finished.
"It is a visual inspection," he said. "I'm not going to get out a hammer and break a hole in the wall."
He will stand over it - or be required to stand over it.I don't care what kind of inspection he conducted. He signed a fire cert and he should stand over it or pay the price. Otherwise there is no point in a fire safety certificate.
I don't care what kind of inspection he conducted. He signed a fire cert and he should stand over it or pay the price. Otherwise there is no point in a fire safety certificate.
Mental note to self. Should I ever buy another propety in Ireland make sure that the fire safety certificate is valid and can be acted upon by my solicitor if need be.
Bronte,
The Fire Safety Certificate is issued by Dublin City Council in advance of construction. The architect in this case would have issued a certificate of compliance to certify that the building had been constructed in accordance with the Fire Safety Certificate and the Building Regulations.
That doesn't make sense, how can you certify something has been built in compliance with Fire safety rules before construction.
Is it a two step procedure? One by DCC and one by the architect?
I don't care what kind of inspection he conducted. He signed a fire cert and he should stand over it or pay the price. Otherwise there is no point in a fire safety certificate.
Mental note to self. Should I ever buy another propety in Ireland make sure that the fire safety certificate is valid and can be acted upon by my solicitor if need be.[/QUOTE
If he signed a fire cert based on a visual inspection and that was/is all that is required, he has done his job.
The Fire Cert is issued that the building IF BUILT IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATION SUBMITTED will comply with the Fire regulations.That doesn't make sense, how can you certify something has been built in compliance with Fire safety rules before construction.
Is it a two step procedure? One by DCC and one by the architect?
That doesn't make sense, how can you certify something has been built in compliance with Fire safety rules before construction.
Is it a two step procedure? One by DCC and one by the architect?
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