I WAS quite shocked to read your front page item on fire safety matters at Crown Heights in the latest edition of the Gazette (April 18) and would like to add my concerns to the issue.

As a regular commuter to London from Basingstoke station at the time I witnessed the commercial building that once housed IBM in Alencon Link being converted to residential use and was quite alarmed to see, in the latter stages of this conversion, large 100mm slabs of what looked for all the world like polystyrene being fixed to the outside of this building, presumably to provide extra insulation. These slabs were later painted or rendered to look like a more substantial stone/concrete application. This building is adjacent to those mentioned in your article and is now known, somewhat grandly, as Skyline Plaza.

READ MORE: 'We live in fear': Residents worry about 'potentially dangerous' cladding after fire

Basingstoke Gazette: Crown HeightsMy concern at the time was such that I wrote to the Basingstoke MP, Maria Miller, citing my fears on the use of this material in this manner and for her to look into this matter. The reply from her office was reassuring and for me not to worry, as there were no buildings in Basingstoke clad with any flammable cladding, including the one in question. No source for this information was given. Quite obviously, and as your front page seems to suggest - somewhat late in the day - quite the opposite is true. Of course, there is a chance that the builders of Skyline Plaza were using some magical form of non-flammable polystyrene – I somehow doubt that this exists, however.

David Dry

Allnutt Avenue

Basingstoke

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