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.
What is the role of solicitors and conveyancing in this? Don't they have a responsibility to protect their clients? Why did they accept a cert based on 'visual inspection only'?
I totally disagree. If a compliance certificate is issued, then the building is deemed to be compliant by a member of a professional body who has the expertise and training and authority to certify said building. If he is on-site to view the progress of the building and knows/trusts the builder implicitly, then a visual inspection 'may' be OK. However, he is putting his reputation and also the lives of the tenants on the line. So any compliance cert issued should have no assumptions made in it's issue.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.
Agreed.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.
Architects can charge for driving to a building, have 'a look around' and sign a form confirming life-saving measures are in place (when there is no way they can be sure of this, visually). This is presumably the subject of some agreement by their professional body. It's shocking that this was allowed. Whatever piece of documentation that will be waved around (stating that the architect in this case did no wrong and that a visual inspection was all that was necessary) should be edited to remove the 'visual' aspect. No renegotiation of fees should occur either.He will stand over it - or be required to stand over it.
However if it says "this was a visual inspection only and no opening up was undertaken" - then it is a very limited document.
This is acceptable to people (banks, solicitors, purchasers) who look for the Fire Cert.
It is not in architects' interest that these things exist - they would prefer if the architect was involved in the entire construction process (more work and therefore money for them).
Even going past the whole visual inspection thing and I agree that Architects, Engineers, Solicitors all have questions to answer, the simple fact is that work clearly wasn't done by the builder/sub-contractors even if they certified to the architect that it was. What is the penalty for recklessy endangering peoples lives like in this case? I am guessing a small fine possibly?
You should actually read the document before you comment on it - and perhaps lobby the Dept. of Environment for a change to the Building Regulations if you feel that standards should be improved.I totally disagree. If a compliance certificate is issued, then the building is deemed to be compliant by a member of a professional body who has the expertise and training and authority to certify said building. If he is on-site to view the progress of the building and knows/trusts the builder implicitly, then a visual inspection 'may' be OK. However, he is putting his reputation and also the lives of the tenants on the line. So any compliance cert issued should have no assumptions made in it's issue.
I'm rather flabbergasted that you wish to assign responsibility for this to someone who specifically says that what they are doing and what they are not doing. We might as well assign responsibility to you - and I suggest that no negotiation of fees with you should occur either.This is presumably the subject of some agreement by their professional body. It's shocking that this was allowed. Whatever piece of documentation that will be waved around (stating that the architect in this case did no wrong and that a visual inspection was all that was necessary) should be edited to remove the 'visual' aspect. No renegotiation of fees should occur either.
There appears not to have been a supervising architect in this case - all there appears to have been is the requirement that "someone sign a bit of paper so we can hand this over" and someone who said "that's grand, we won't actually read the bit of paper and see what it says".As ever in Ireland, no-one will be held ultimately responsible.
A committee will be formed. Platitudes will be uttered that "this must never happen again".
Architects or someone else will be forced to inspect buildings properly but fees will probably increase exponentially as a result.
Most other countries (e.g. UK, US, most European countries) have inspections carried out by the Building Inspectors employed by the Local Authorities during the construction process. Ireland has decided that this was an unnecessary expense - accept that or change it.Professional Indemnity Insurance will never have to be claimed as no-one will be charged with negligence.
The Developers will not be held accountable.
The LA will not be held accountable.
Politicians will voice their horror at the slip in standards and blame each other (or FF) while having photos taken with the poor unfortunates who are gonna be stuck with unsaleable properties.
And the world keeps turning until the next scandal.
The more things change...etc.etc.etc...
No, he is liable if he is negligent.Then is the architect not liable if the building is not built in accordance wth Fire Safety?
No, he is liable if he is negligent.
If the architect says:
"This building was built in accordance with Fire Safety Regulations" and it is not, then he is liable.
If the architect says:
"I only had a visual inspection of this, and everything I saw appeared to be in compliance with the drawings submitted for the Fire Safety Certificate and there were no particular issues which made me question that" - then the architect is only liable if what he says is negligently made.
If the purchaser has a problem with this, they should require a higher level of testing.
If people have a problem with the fact that it is up to the purchaser to be satisfied with the wording, then pressure should be put on the government to change the system.
Of course they are aware of the dysfunction.If professional architects can't see the shortfall in the system, they are idiots. If as professionals, they along with their professional bodies did not make noise over the years with regards to this potential problem, they are a disgrace. When did they point out the dangers that they must have known was going on to some extent? Did they campaign against such a system back in the 1990's? Using phrases like
[FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri]‘visual inspection’
[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri]‘no opening up’
[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri]‘substantial compliance‘
[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri]‘providing evidence for title purposes’
[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri]‘not a report on the condition’ [/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri]‘we were not retained to supervise construction [/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri][/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri]is a way for covering one's behind and does not portray a so called profession a very good light.[/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri][/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT=Calibri,Calibri][FONT=Calibri,Calibri]No different to solicitors doing incompetent conveyance work but still being within the law.
[/FONT][/FONT]
When buying a house or apartment, all purchasers are heavily dependant on what their expert advisers (surveyor and solicitor) tell them. I would have expected more rigor from the solicitors involved in these cases.You should actually read the document before you comment on it - and perhaps lobby the Dept. of Environment for a change to the Building Regulations if you feel that standards should be improved.
At present, it is for the purchaser (or their representatives) to ensure that they are satisfied with the documents provided. In this case, the purchasers were happy to accept an Opinion after the fact based on a visual inspection only and a promise from the developer.
When buying a house or apartment, all purchasers are heavily dependant on what their expert advisers (surveyor and solicitor) tell them. I would have expected more rigor from the solicitors involved in these cases.
Possibly - it was generally acceptable to the profession and to banks generally.When buying a house or apartment, all purchasers are heavily dependant on what their expert advisers (surveyor and solicitor) tell them. I would have expected more rigor from the solicitors involved in these cases.
Yes one can - there are only 2 opinions given - one on compliance with Planning and one on compliance with Building Regulations. The Building Regulations compliance addresses all of that foundations, damp courses, underfloor heating etc. thing.Can one inspect foundations, damp courses, underfloor heating etc after house is completed
The solicitor is working directly for the purchaser. You can't expect a purchaser to understand the detail of building regs, title, conveyancing, planning etc. Purchasers pay experts to advise them on this.They are but the level of ignorance is astounding - people generally don't bother to inform themselves and have unquestioning faith in their builder, architect, solicitor et al.
All purchasers are consumers and while not having expertise they should inform themselves in order to have a working knowledge. As a minimum, if advice isn't forthcoming they should ask the advocate in their pay to explain all details fully.
And then people bizarrely complain when things go wrong, pleading 'no-one told me'.
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