CLC issues guidance to ease Gateway 2 applications for HRBs
In a bid to elevate the clarity, consistency, and speed of Building Control Approval (Gateway 2) applications, the Construction Leadership Council (CLC) has released a comprehensive Guidance Suite, developed with industry experts and the Building Safety Regulator (BSR), specifically for new Higher-Risk Buildings (HRBs) in England.
The 34-page publication is composed of seven guidance notes, each offering actionable advice for professionals crafting and evaluating Gateway 2 submissions.
- The Building Safety Regime for a new HRB is a visual roadmap through the three-stage safety process: Planning (Gateway 1), Building Control Approval (Gateway 2), and Completion (Gateway 3).
- Sufficient level of design clarifies the quality and detail of design data required to demonstrate regulatory compliance during Gateway 2.
- Approval with requirements offers a structured way to secure conditional approval for elements pending further design, provided there's a clear submission plan.
- The application information schedule encourages the use of a navigable schedule that links submitted documents to relevant regulatory criteria, improving transparency and efficiency.
- The application project brief advises on crafting a concise but detailed project summary that helps the regulator assign the right multidisciplinary review team.
- The application document management and submission lays out best practices in structuring folders, naming files, and submitting via the BSR’s portal to streamline the review process.
- The application strategy for staged or multi-building applications guides preparatory strategy and early engagement for complex, phased, or multi-building projects.
Improved submission standards
Recent evidence indicates that a major cause of delays or rejection is insufficiently detailed applications – accounting for a large proportion of rejections. This guidance aims to equip building engineers with a roadmap to avoid such pitfalls.
By adopting tools like the Application Information Schedule and Project Brief, submissions become more intuitive for assessors – potentially halving review times from typical 40-48 week delays.
The Approval with Requirements model allows conditional approval for incomplete design areas – so long as the submitted plan demonstrates eventual compliance. This balances project momentum with safety obligations.
The CLC said the guidance promotes proactive, early-stage engagement with regulators – especially for staged or multi-building developments – enabling smoother coordination and resource allocation.
The Guidance Suite is available to download here.