Grenfell Tower to be covered in protective wrapping
- Published
Grenfell Tower will be covered in a protective wrap to help with forensic investigations, the site manager says.
Michael Lockwood told a public meeting on Wednesday that the charred building, in North Kensington in London, would be covered in August.
He said that he expected the demolition of the tower block, where at least 80 people died in the fire on 14 June, would begin "towards the end of 2018".
He added that some possessions could be retrieved from 33 of the block's flats.
Speaking at the Notting Hill Methodist Church, Mr Lockwood said the recovery operation tower block could last until November this year.
The criminal investigation into the building - which requires material to be collected - could go on until January.
The covering of the 24-storey tower block will use scaffolding, which Mr Lockwood said would aid workers in demolishing the building.
He said: "I think that to be honest, the building will stay up throughout 2018.
"Then towards the end of 2018, I think we could start to bring it down, if that is what the community wants, and the scaffolding will help us to do that because we can do that within the wrap."
Any decision on what happens to the site after its deconstruction would be made with input from the community, he added.
Some flats in the building remain "completely untouched and in perfect condition" he said, while others are devastated.
There are some 33 flats in the block from which some possessions could be retrieved and returned to residents "in the next week or so", he added.
A memorial service for five of the residents who perished in the fire was held at St Helen's Church in North Kensington.
The service, attended by the Archbishop of York, remembered artist Khadiya Saye and her mother Mary Mendy, Berktki Haftom and her 12-year-old son Beruk, and a five-year-old boy called Isaac.
Meanwhile, experts who recovered remains after the 9/11 attack in New York are helping police investigators comb through debris from the fire.
Metropolitan Police Deputy Commissioner Craig Mackey said last week that 200 officers would be sifting through 15 tonnes of debris "until Christmas time".
- Published26 July 2017
- Published25 July 2017
- Published20 July 2017
- Published19 July 2017
- Published18 July 2017