logo
Worcester Barbourne Works lower-floor residents allowed home

Worcester Barbourne Works lower-floor residents allowed home

BBC News17-06-2025
A large number of residents forced to evacuate their apartment block over dangerous cladding and fire safety risk nearly two weeks ago are set to return home.Sixty people, including eight children, were told to leave the Barbourne Works in Worcester on 4 June, after fire inspectors raised a safety alert.Hereford and Worcester Fire and Rescue Service (HWFRS), which placed the building under a prohibition notice, said it was now safe for the ground and first floors to be reoccupied.However FirstPort, the building's management agent, said the second and third floors still did not meet the required standards for fire escape, and work was continuing.
The evacuation took place after fire inspectors found problems that dated back to when the former factory was converted to flats 20 years ago. "[But] we are pleased to be able to welcome residents of the ground and first floors back home and we sincerely thank them for their patience and support over the last two weeks whilst we've works through this complex situation," a FirstPort spokesperson said.
'Risk was so severe'
The firm had taken a central role in co-ordinating a response to the safety alert, which involved working with stakeholders including Homes England, the fire service, the building's freeholder and council. "Unfortunately, for residents of the second and third floors the prohibition notice remains in place, as these units currently do not meet the required standards for fire escape," the spokesperson added. Work is continuing to implement safety measures so the upper floors could be re-occupied "as soon as possible". Inspectors found dangers "so significant and the risk to residents was so severe" that the notice was issued and residents had to leave the 46 flats.
Some residents told the BBC they were shocked, had "absolutely no warning" and had to quickly leave their homes. Forty-seven people went to stay with family and friends and 13 went to a rest centre before being put up in hotels, fire service group commander Simon Cusack said previously.
Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BBC star's long lasting £4.99 plant from B&Q keeps your garden lush & green all summer – especially in dry shady areas
BBC star's long lasting £4.99 plant from B&Q keeps your garden lush & green all summer – especially in dry shady areas

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

BBC star's long lasting £4.99 plant from B&Q keeps your garden lush & green all summer – especially in dry shady areas

MOST horticultural enthusiasts will have heard of BBC Gardeners Question Time. A comforting weekly panel show on the radio - it's been running for 68 years - with a raft of experts answering audience questions. 2 2 Ahead of their Summer Garden party, they've shared the most popular five questions asked - so I asked Panelist and Garden Designer Matthew Wilson to give us his answers. WHAT TREE HAS BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS, EDIBLE FRUIT, SEASONAL INTEREST, AUTUMN COLOUR, FAST GROWING, ENCOURAGES WILDLIFE AND IS CLIMATE CHANGE RESILIENT? Medlar Mesphalus Germanica, is hugely overlooked. It's got fantastic bigger than average blossom, you can make Medlar jelly and it's got really great autumn colour. It's a dome shaped tree, not massively tall, fast growing and great character in the trunk Or Cydonia Chinesis - the Chinese Quince - is small but has a beautiful full blossom, yellow fruit for quince jelly, autumn colour and is good for wildlife. Both are resilient and climate change tolerant. HOW DO I STOP SLUGS AND SNAILS: Really the only guaranteed way is to use garlic barrier spray. It's not harmful to animals but repugnant to mollusks and insects. Smash garlic gloves and hot water together - or use dried garlic granules rehydrated in water. Spray at least once a month. PLANTING SUGGESTIONS FOR A DRY SHADY BORDER Modify expectations and be happy if it's green. Ferns are brilliant - like our native shield fern, Polystichum, or Dryopteris or Erythgrosora. Plant with some hybrid hellebores, bulbs, vinca and pachysandra - plant densely and it will be thick, green and lush - and really attractive. B&Q are currently selling a collection of five fern - suitable for outdoor gardens - for £24.99 - which means each fern cost just £4.99. WHY ISN'T MY PLANT FLOWERING? Ninety nine times out of a hundred - it's because it's being pruned at the wrong time. If it flowers early in the year, it's flowering on the wood that it's formed the previous year - so don't prune until after it's flowered. If it flowering late in the year - it's flowering on the current season's wood - so prune it down hard in spring. WHEN'S THE BEST TIME TO PRUNE CLEMATIS If it flowers in winter or early spring, you don't need to prune it at all. Aside from any tidying up that you might want to do. If it's early summer pruning - prune in late winter or early spring and cut back by half, and if it's late summer pruning - cut it down to the ground. BBC Radio 4's annual Gardeners' Question Time Summer Garden Party 2025 will be hosted at the iconic RHS Garden Hyde Hall in Essex on Saturday August 2, during the RHS Hyde Hall Flower Show. Two bumper episodes of Gardeners' Question Time will be recorded in front of a live audience where members of the public can join an expert panel for a host of horticultural discussions - at 12 pm and 2 pm. Both will air on BBC R4 in the following weeks. Also in Veronica's colum this week... Top tips, topiarary awards and a chance to win an outdoor seating set worth £899 HENCHMANN have revealed the winners of their 2025 Topiary Awards - with an elephant, a boot, a 36 foot-long dragon and a range of other incredible living sculptures from across the UK and Europe taking centre stage. Paul Everden, from Norfolk, won the Home Gardener Category with a topiary knot garden he has nurtured for over 35 years. Second place was Peterborough-based Angela Hawkins with her holly elephant 'Mungo' that's taken 25 years. Henchman's Choice award went to Kim Palmer from Suffolk for 'George' – her amazing 36-foot-long yew dragon. Chris Reeve, from Suffolk, won the UK Professional title with a giant work boot - and Darrell Adams, from Hampshire, was second with his restoration of a formal topiary garden François Vandaneon won the Europe, Home Gardener category - with Cédric Bronnimann, also from France - winning the professional title for Europe. WIN! One lucky reader can get their hands on a stylish British Garden Centres' Fern Living Andorra Deluxe 4 Seat Round Set - worth £ 899.99 - complete with a 2.2m parasol – perfect for family meals al fresco. To enter visit or write to Sun Fern Living Competition, PO Box 3190, Colchester, Essex, CO2 8GP. Include your name, age, email or phone. UK residents 18+ only. Entries close 11.59pm. July 26, 2025. T&Cs apply. PLANT OF THE WEEK Calla Lily 'Dubai Nights' has rich dark purple, almost black leaves with creamy white edge and glossy green leaves speckled with white. Amazing in groups in pots - tender, likes partial shade - good in borders. JOB OF THE WEEK Bindweed will be rampaging through your outside space - try to get it all out. Tie in climbers, pinch out tomatoes. For more tips and garden content, follow me @biros_and_bloom

Church bids to exhume head of Catholic martyr Sir Thomas More - five centuries after it was put on spike when he was executed
Church bids to exhume head of Catholic martyr Sir Thomas More - five centuries after it was put on spike when he was executed

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Church bids to exhume head of Catholic martyr Sir Thomas More - five centuries after it was put on spike when he was executed

Sir Thomas More's head could be exhumed 500 years after it was parboiled and put on a spike on London Bridge. St Dunstan's, an Anglican church in Canterbury, Kent, where the remains of Henry VIII's lord chancellor lie, has launched a bid to have them unearthed and placed in a shrine. More was beheaded at Tower Hill in 1535 after he refused to acknowledge the monarch as head of the church following Henry's break from Rome. His body was buried in the Chapel of St Peter ad Vincula at the Tower of London, but his head was taken from the scaffold and put on a spike on London Bridge. Amid fears More's head would be thrown in the Thames, his daughter Margaret Roper rescued it and reportedly kept it in spices for the rest of her life. It was then buried with her and transferred to the Roper family grave at St Dunstan's in 1578, where it has been kept in a vault behind metal bars ever since. More was declared a martyr by the Vatican in 1935 - meaning his remains are now considered a holy relic in the Catholic Church. According to The Times, St Dunstan's is seeking to exhume More's remains in time for the 500th anniversary of his death in 2035. However, the church will need to get permission from the commissary court in Canterbury before any work can go ahead. It is understood that the congregants at St Dunstan's church were told about the plans last Sunday. A statement read: 'What the [parochial church council] PCC has agreed, subject to all the right permissions being granted, is to exhume and conserve what remains of the relic, which will take several years to dry out and stabilise. 'We could just put it back in the vault, maybe in a reliquary of some kind, or we could place the reliquary in some sort of shrine or carved stone pillar above ground in the Roper chapel, which is what many of our visitors have requested. We'd really appreciate your ideas and thoughts.' Thomas More was a lawyer, philosopher and statesman who served as Lord Chancellor to Henry VIII. He is best known for his opposition to Henry VIII's break from the Catholic Church. More refused to recognise the king as head of the Church of England, leading to his execution for treason. He was canonised as a saint in 1935. Historically, More was both devout and intellectual, known for his wit and integrity. However, he actively persecuted Protestants, defending the execution of heretics in The Confutation Of Tyndale's Answer: 'And for heretics, as they be... the clergy doth denounce them. And as they be well worthy, the temporalty doth burn them.' Yet More's kindness in his private life was also noted by his contemporaries. Erasmus, a close friend, described More as gentle and loving, and said his refusal to take the oath was a principled stand.

BREAKING NEWS Crews tackle huge late-night blaze at industrial estate with warehouse, cranes and vehicles on fire
BREAKING NEWS Crews tackle huge late-night blaze at industrial estate with warehouse, cranes and vehicles on fire

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Crews tackle huge late-night blaze at industrial estate with warehouse, cranes and vehicles on fire

Around 150 firefighters are tackling a huge late-night blaze at an industrial estate in London. A warehouse has caught fire along with a crane and several other vehicles. A large emergency response including 25 fire engines rushed to Erith at around 10.45pm on Friday. Three of the London Fire Brigade's 32-metre turntable ladders have been deployed to provide a vantage point for assessing the scene and to deliver water from above. Local residents are being advised to keep their windows and doors closed where possible due to smoke being produced. A spokesperson for the London Fire Brigade said: 'The Brigade's Control Officers took the first of 10 calls to the fire and mobilised crews from Bexley, Erith, Plumstead, East Greenwich, Sidcup and surrounding fire stations to the scene. 'The cause of the fire is not known at this time.' They added that it is likely to be a 'protracted incident' with crews on scene throughout the night.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store