National House Building Council

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NHBC Logo new.gif
National House-Building Council (NHBC)
Supporting the house-building industry in improving the build quality of new homes for homebuyers, whilst providing warranty protection to consumers when required. Non profit distributing.
Industry House Building, Insurance and warranty, Training, Research
Founded 1936
Headquarters Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England
Key people
Mike Quinton (Chief Executive), Isabel Hudson (Chairman)
Directors: Stewart Baseley, Ian Davis, Sir John Harman, Sir (Alastair) Muir Russell, Greg Fitzgerald, Dame Helena Shovelton, Jean Parks, Neil Jefferson, Chris Rash, Ian Craston
Revenue Increase£28,000,000 GBP surplus after tax (2010/11)
Number of employees
1,300+ staff including 700 inspectors and 80 Members of the Council
Slogan Raising Standards. Protecting Homeowners
Website www.nhbc.co.uk

NHBC (National House-Building Council) states its primary purpose as raising the construction standards of new homes in the UK and providing consumer protection for homebuyers through its world-leading 10-year Buildmark warranty.

Established in 1936, NHBC is the UK's largest provider of new home warranties. Around 80% of new homes built in the UK each year have an NHBC 10-year warranty.[citation needed] NHBC is also the UK's largest single Approved Inspector for Building Regulations. Its other activities include the provision of services linked to house building and general construction including energy ratings, health and safety, sustainability and training. It also provides industry statistics and benchmarking services.

It is a non-profit distributing company so reinvests "profit" in its activities to improve the quality of new homes to protect the interests of homeowners.

NHBC is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and the Prudential Regulation Authority

New home warranties and build standards

NHBC offers warranties for newly built or converted private housing, affordable housing, self-build homes and commercial premises located on mixed use housing schemes. Mortgage lenders will usually require that a warranty is in place before lending on a newly built property as detailed in the Council of Mortgage Lenders handbook.

Builders and developers who sell properties with NHBC warranties must adhere to NHBC's strict standards of construction contained in the NHBC Technical Standards in addition to complying with Building Regulations in the UK.

NHBC inspectors visit building sites at key stages to check compliance with its Technical Standards. The stages are usually (but can sometimes be more): foundations, drainage, superstructure (e.g. brickwork), pre-plaster and pre-handover to the buyer. For flats, they also inspect roof construction. The inspection process is not designed to check every detail of the build but if NHBC is satisfied with the overall build quality they will issue the warranty for the new home/premises.

Buildmark, the NHBC warranty for private housing is split into 2 parts. In the first 2 years, the builder is responsible for fixing any defects caused by its failure to build to NHBC Technical Standards. If the builder fails to do this or has gone out of business, NHBC will take responsibility to fix the defect. From the start of the third year until the home is 10 years old, NHBC is responsible for putting right defects to the structural and weather-proofing parts of the home caused by breaches of its Technical Standards.

Building Control

In 1985, under the Building Act 1984, NHBC set up a subsidiary company (NHBC Building Control Services Ltd) and became the first private sector building control body licensed as an Approved Inspector for the purpose of verifying that buildings are built in accordance with the building regulations across England and Wales. It is the largest single Approved Inspector in England and Wales (inspecting around 50% of all new-build properties in the UK) and assists builders to achieve compliance and advises on Building Regulations for schemes ranging from residential developments to large commercial and mixed use sites.[citation needed]

Other services

NHBC offers a range of additional services to help builders comply with Building Regulations, Health and Safety legislation and other construction rules. These include: energy rating services (SAP and SBEM), energy performance certificates, Code for Sustainable Homes and BREEAM assessments, CDM co-ordination, health and safety audits, UKAS accredited testing for sound insulation and air tightness.

They also offer a wide range of training courses for building professionals including construction related National Vocational Qualifications NVQs. NHBC compiles and distributes statistics and analysis about the UK housing market that are used by Government and financial institutions, as well as homebuilders. Examples are the Housing Market Report and the NHBC Quarterly Statistics. Purchasers of new homes are also surveyed providing statistics about levels of customer satisfaction in their homes.

Industry Awards

NHBC runs two national awards programmes: Pride in the Job and the NHBC Health and Safety Awards.

Consumer Code for Home Builders

NHBC was a founder member of The Consumer Code for Home Builders which gives added protection and rights to the buyers of brand new homes. The aim of the Code is to ensure that new home buyers are given all the information they need about their new home before they sign contracts and treated fairly afterwards.

History/milestones

NHBC was originally set up as the National House Builders Registration Council (NHBRC) in the United Kingdom in 1936 with the primary purpose to increase the care and professionalism shown by house builders.

As a Registered Housebuilder under the voluntary scheme, houses were inspected during building, buyers were covered by a 2 year warranty against major defects, and against the insolvency of the builder. By 1963, 26% of all housing was built by Registered Housebuilders.

In 1964 and 1965 changes were introduced, including the extension of the warranty to 10 years.[1] 1967 saw the upgrading of the NHBRC's standards, particularly in the provision of power outlets, kitchen design and space heating, drawing on the recommendations of the Parker Morris Committee. By the end of 1970, 92% of new homes were built by NHBRC members.

In 1973, the name changed to the National House-Building Council (NHBC) and the organisation became completely independent from government and house builders. It was approved by the Department of Trade as an insurance company.

Criticism

The NHBC was criticised on a 2010 edition of the BBC consumer television programme Watchdog for failing to repair homes due to incorrect surveying of problem properties by relevant professionals, and thus failing to either compensate owners financially or fix any problems promptly, for newly built properties under their warranty.[2]

NHBC apologised to the families featured in the Watchdog programme for any mistakes that were made during the handling of their claims. NHBC argued that the cases showed how complex construction issues can be and that expert opinions from construction professionals could differ.

They also stated that they resolve claims from around 15,000 homeowners each year on homes up to 10 years old and also help to resolve around 5,000 disputes between homeowners and their builders each year.[3]

In 2010/11 NHBC paid claims totalling £74.4 million.[4]

See also

References

  1. About NHBC - NHBC Website
  2. NHBC - customers not thrilled with their build..., reference date 28 September 2010
  3. NHBC Watchdog Statement, reference date 23 September 2010
  4. NHBC Annual Review 2010, reference date August 2011

External links