The future of the Houses of Parliament is no longer a distant concern but an urgent safety question. As crumbling masonry, outdated wiring and antiquated fire systems continue to jeopardise one of Britain’s most iconic buildings, the debate over how best to restore the Palace of Westminster has intensified. In “The House | As former London Fire Brigade Chief, I believe we must choose the safest restoration option: full decant,” PoliticsHome explores a stark warning from one of the country’s most experienced fire safety professionals. Drawing on frontline expertise, the article lays out why anything short of a full decant-completely moving MPs and peers out during restoration-risks repeating the complacency that has preceded past disasters. It is a call to treat Parliament not just as a symbol of democracy, but as a workplace and public space that must meet the most basic standard of all: keeping people safe.
Assessing the fire safety risks posed by a patchwork restoration of the Palace of Westminster
A piecemeal approach to refurbishing a labyrinthine, Grade I listed building riddled with hidden voids, timber-lined shafts and aging electrics is not just inefficient; it is inherently dangerous. Each new phase of work risks introducing fresh ignition sources, temporary wiring and hot works into an already combustible habitat, while thousands of people continue to work and visit the site daily. Firefighters confronting an incident in these circumstances would face a moving target: escape routes altered by scaffolding and hoardings, fire doors routinely propped open for contractors, and detection systems periodically isolated. In such a scenario, even the most experienced crews could struggle to locate a seat of fire quickly enough to prevent it from spreading through the building’s interconnected cavities.
From a risk management standpoint, the contrast between a rolling, on-site refurbishment and a full decant is stark:
- Compartmentation is compromised when work zones migrate and barriers are repeatedly breached.
- Evacuation planning becomes complex and less reliable as layouts change week by week.
- Contractor oversight is harder when multiple trades operate simultaneously around live parliamentary business.
- Detection and suppression systems are frequently taken offline or bypassed during intrusive works.
| Option | People at daily risk | Complexity for fire crews |
|---|---|---|
| Patchwork works | High | Unpredictable, changing layout |
| Full decant | Low | Stable, pre-planned environment |
Why full decant is the only credible option to protect MPs staff and the public
From an operational fire safety perspective, you cannot run a high‑risk construction site and a functioning legislature side by side without multiplying danger. The Palace is already a maze of confined corridors,hidden voids and ageing services; layering in hot works,temporary wiring and flammable materials dramatically increases ignition sources and obstructs escape routes. Attempting to “phase” the works while keeping MPs,staff and visitors in situ would mean constantly shifting fire strategies,partial closures and improvised protections that are notoriously fragile. Continuous evacuation drills, intrusive alarms and dust‑laden air would become part of everyday life, eroding vigilance and masking early signs of real emergencies. In modern risk terms, you either treat this as a national construction project or as a place of work open to the public – you cannot credibly pretend it is safely both.
Committing to a single, time‑limited move out allows safety systems to be designed coherently, tested rigorously and monitored without the pressure of daily parliamentary business. It permits proper compartmentation, clear separation between live services and temporary works, and meaningful control of contractors. It also protects those who have the least voice in this debate but face the greatest exposure: the thousands of people who keep Parliament running every day. Their protection should be non‑negotiable, which in practice means choosing the option that removes them from an evolving building site entirely.Key differences are stark:
- Clarity of obligation – one environment managed as a construction zone, not a muddled hybrid.
- Lower cumulative exposure – staff are not working for years in a live risk environment.
- Stronger prevention – intrusive works undertaken without the constraints of daily sittings.
- Realistic evacuation – fewer people on site, clearer escape routes, better control.
| Scenario | Fire Risk | Disruption |
|---|---|---|
| Remain on site | High and prolonged | Constant and unpredictable |
| Move out fully | Short, controlled peak | Intense but time‑limited |
Learning from Grenfell and historic building fires to inform Parliament’s restoration plan
Fire does not respect heritage, prestige or symbolism; it exploits weakness. The horror at Grenfell, like the infernos at Windsor Castle, the Glasgow School of Art and Notre-Dame, showed how quickly seemingly solid structures can be overwhelmed when modern risks collide with outdated fabric. In each case, investigators pointed to a lethal mix of combustible materials, complex layouts, inadequate compartmentation and the difficulty of firefighting in constrained conditions. Westminster shares many of those vulnerabilities-interlocking voids, hidden shafts, miles of ageing cabling, and a patchwork of temporary fixes laid over Victorian infrastructure. To ignore the pattern visible from these disasters would be to pretend that a building steeped in history is somehow exempt from the physics of fire.
Those lessons translate into clear principles for any credible renewal programme, notably when thousands of people and the functioning of a democracy are at stake:
- Minimise occupancy during high-risk works – hot works, stripping out and rewiring are safest when politicians, staff and visitors are elsewhere.
- Guarantee clear access for firefighters – no maze of scaffolding, locked doors or temporary partitions blocking hose lines and evacuation routes.
- Design-in modern protection – sprinklers, automated detection and effective compartmentation must be integrated, not retrofitted as an afterthought.
- Assume the worst-case scenario – planning should be based on full building involvement at night, not on optimistic best guesses.
| Fire Lesson | Risk if Work Continues with Occupants | Benefit of Full Decant |
|---|---|---|
| Complex layouts | Slower evacuation, trapped occupants | Clear zones for contractors and responders |
| Hot works & sparks | Ignition near offices and committee rooms | Controlled environment, fewer ignition sources |
| Hidden voids | Undetected fire spread under occupied areas | Full exposure and treatment of cavities |
| Legacy wiring | Electrical faults beside live business | Complete replacement without daily time pressure |
Concrete steps for delivering a safe timely and cost effective full decant programme
Delivering this programme begins with a disciplined governance and sequencing plan that treats safety-critical work as non-negotiable. A dedicated delivery authority must be empowered to make rapid, expert-led decisions, protected from short-term political turbulence and guided by a clear risk register that is publicly accessible. Early works should prioritise intrusive surveys, full digital mapping of building services, and the creation of a secure off-site “shadow estate” where parliamentary functions can operate without interruption. Alongside this, obvious procurement-anchored in framework agreements with proven major-project contractors-can lock in competitive pricing while avoiding the false economy of stop-start commissioning.
- Early,intrusive surveys to expose hidden structural and fire risks
- Dedicated delivery authority with clear statutory powers
- Robust decant facilities that preserve parliamentary scrutiny and access
- Transparent procurement with performance-based contracts
- Live risk registers open to autonomous scrutiny
| Phase | Core Objective | Key Safety Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Decant & Setup | Relocate all occupants and services | Zero public access to live construction zones |
| Strip-Out & Repair | Expose and replace failing systems | Removal of legacy fire and electrical hazards |
| Rebuild & Return | Modernise,test and certify | Fully compliant,resilient parliamentary estate |
Cost control in such a complex environment relies on clarity,consolidation and constraint. Fixed, publicly stated milestones-backed by independent assurance from fire, structural and heritage experts-allow progress to be measured against safety and value rather than rhetoric. Bringing all major works into a single,time-limited construction window avoids the spiralling costs of piecemeal projects carried out around occupants,and sharply reduces the risk of catastrophic incidents during “business as usual”.With Parliament operating from a well-equipped temporary home, contractors can work to extended hours, safer logistics and fewer compromises on fire segregation and emergency access, delivering a modernised estate that honours its history without repeating it.
Insights and Conclusions
the choice before Parliament is not simply one of cost or convenience, but of responsibility. The warnings from safety experts, including those who have led frontline services, are clear: delaying decisive action only increases the risk to people and to one of the world’s most recognisable democratic institutions.
Full decant may be politically uncomfortable and financially daunting, but it is also the option most likely to safeguard both lives and the long-term future of the Palace of Westminster. As MPs weigh up the competing pressures, they will need to decide whether to prioritise short-term optics or long-term safety. History will judge them not on how long they managed to keep business as usual going, but on whether they acted in time to prevent a foreseeable disaster.