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  • Creating safe retail environments

    Wrightstyle is a specialist steel and aluminium glazing company and supplies its fire-rated systems internationally. In light of heightened security worries, Jane Embury, the company’s marketing director, looks at safety for the retail sector.

    The retail sector has changed out of all recognition, with large shopping centres usurping the traditional High Street – becoming destinations offering everything you could possibly want to buy, eat, drink, or be entertained by.

    And that makes them extremely attractive places for another kind of visitor and although, mercifully, the UK has not experienced a terrorist attack in a shopping centre, the 2013 assault on the Westgate Shopping Centre in Nairobi – which killed 67 and injured 175 others – is a stark reminder that an ideal target for the terrorist is a crowded place.

    In November 2014, to coincide with Britain’s counter terrorism week, police forces in the West Midlands, Liverpool and Manchester – and others – warned of the risks to shopping centres. In August, the UK raised its threat level from substantial to severe, the second highest level.

    Also last November, Home Secretary Theresa May said that terrorists have sought to kill thousands in around 40 plots targeting Britain since the July 7 attacks on London nearly ten years ago. She also added that in a speech in central London, that more than 750 people have been arrested for terrorism-related offences since April 2010, with 212 charged and 148 successfully prosecuted.

    In May last year, the Home Affairs Select Committee said that police should contact every shopping centre with guidance from the British Council of Shopping Centres, including a requirement for shops to have a security plan and to test it. The Council produced the guide in partnership with the National Counter Terrorism Security Office.

    But it’s not just about vigilance and having a fast response to any attack. It’s about having both passive and active measures in place to contain an explosive incident.

    We’ve supplied our systems worldwide, most recently for retail and leisure regeneration schemes in Hong Kong and Beirut. Our glazing systems are primarily, of course, to protect against fire and smoke.

    But we’ve also tested one of our glazed assemblies against a lorry bomb, generally agreed to be some 500-kg of TNT explosive. We also then tested the same assembly against a car bomb – both tests were successful.

    The importance of those tests is that glass fragments kill more people in an attack in an urban area than the explosion itself. Keeping the glass intact in its framing system is a potential life-saver.

    The aesthetic advantages of glass are obvious, and how glass can transform the ambience and functionality of interior space is now well understood. The challenge for us is to now keep pace with architectural evolution – from providing unrivalled performance against fire, or acoustic and weather performance, to combating terrorist attack.

    That last challenge is perhaps the biggest one that we’ve met, successfully completing UK high-pressure blast-resistant testing, underlining our system’s performance against explosive risks. In today’s uncertain world, designing in safety has become an integral part of retail therapy because, as we’re now seeing, there are people out there who aren’t very nice.

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    www.wrightstyle.co.uk

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