A clear signal from Kingston Council
The Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames has approved an additional £2.9 million to complete fire safety works across its housing stock, marking another major step in its long-running remedial programme. According to reporting by the Kingston Courier, the funding will help the council complete the 935 remaining actions out of 4,138 identified through post-Grenfell requirements and routine inspections.
This matters because fire safety is no longer something landlords and local authorities can treat as a background compliance issue. It now sits at the heart of housing management, resident protection, and public trust. Kingston’s latest decision shows what that looks like in practice: putting real money behind the work needed to keep homes safe and compliant.
What the fire safety works include

The official council report dated 19 March 2026 sets out the type of work still required. This includes the provision of suitable fire doors to homes and communal areas, the installation of fire alarms, and compartmentation works throughout the building fabric. These are practical fire safety measures designed to reduce risk, improve protection, and bring housing stock in line with current standards.
The council has also stressed that this programme is preventative. As reported by the South London News, Kingston said the remediation work does not involve major life-threatening concerns such as the removal of flammable cladding or hazardous materials, because its housing stock does not contain those issues.
Why this investment matters
This latest funding decision reflects a wider truth across the sector. Fire safety work costs money, but delay can cost far more. When essential upgrades are postponed, risks can rise, repair costs can grow, and residents can lose confidence. Kingston’s approach suggests that councils are increasingly recognising the need to act early rather than leave compliance work to drift.
In the same committee papers, council officers said that “excellent progress” had already been made, including on critical works, but they also made clear that the remaining items still required specialist provision beyond the existing maintenance contract.
Quinn London’s role in the next phase
To support the final phase, Kingston has awarded a new 12-month contract to Quinn London, with a maximum value of about £2.2 million. The council’s formal decision notice confirms the award to Quinn London for a 12-month period, which means the contract is expected to run through to March 2027.
Quinn London has said it is pleased to continue supporting the council’s programme, describing the investment as backing “high-priority fire safety works” and reinforcing Kingston’s commitment to residents and stronger building safety standards.
A wider lesson for the housing sector
Kingston’s latest investment is about more than one borough. It shows how fire safety has become a core part of responsible housing strategy, not a side issue to be dealt with later. It also highlights the need for experienced professionals who can lead complex programmes, manage technical risk, and keep compliance moving in the right direction.
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