Fire risk in Leicester — social housing, universities and HMOs
Leicester's fire safety workload is concentrated in three sectors: the city's substantial social housing stock, the two university estates (De Montfort, Leicester) and their student-accommodation supply chain, and the HMO and private rented sector across Highfields, Clarendon Park, Stoneygate and Belgrave.
Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service is the enforcing authority across the city and the wider county. Leicester City Council operates a selective and additional HMO licensing scheme across substantial parts of the city, with corresponding fire-safety scrutiny. The Building Safety Regulator is actively engaged with the operators of the city's HRB-classified residential blocks — a category that includes several of Leicester's 1960s and 1970s tower blocks alongside a smaller number of modern purpose-built student blocks.
Sector exposure in Leicester
Social housing across Leicester City Council and the major PRPs (emh group, Riverside, Platform Housing Group, Nottingham Community Housing Association) operates a substantial pre-1980 stock that includes 1960s and 1970s tower blocks, system-built houses and traditional brick estates. Annual Type 1 FRAs, quarterly common-parts fire door inspections and annual flat entrance door inspections drive the year-round workload. HRB-classified blocks additionally face safety case reporting, FRAEW where applicable, and BSR engagement.
The two universities — De Montfort with its central campus and 1960s expansion and the University of Leicester with its older Charles Wilson Building, the Centre for Medicine and the historic Engineering buildings — between them operate hundreds of buildings under the Fire Safety Order. Where their stock includes 11m+ residential, the FSER 2022 inspection regime applies.
The HMO sector across Highfields, Clarendon Park, Knighton, Stoneygate and Belgrave operates on Victorian and Edwardian terraced stock that has been repeatedly subdivided. Common issues are single-stair properties, escape route penetration by later services, and bedroom-door performance below current standards.
Commercial, retail and hospitality across the city centre, Highcross, Belgrave Gate and the Highcross-adjacent regeneration footprint operates under the Fire Safety Order with the additional complexity of public throughput and multi-tenant occupation.
What we routinely find in Leicester FRA work
The most common findings on Leicester Type 1 FRA work are flat entrance door non-compliance, compartmentation defects at service-riser and meter-cupboard locations, fire-stopping breaches where later services have been routed through compartment lines, and combustible items in common parts. In the HMO sector the recurring issues are bedroom doors below FD30S, single-stair properties without adequate compartmentation, and escape route encroachment. On the modern HRB stock we frequently identify inadequate AOV maintenance evidence and missing PAS 9980 FRAEW or low-confidence FRAEW requiring intrusive sampling.
How Firesurv delivers in Leicester
Firesurv's Leicester coverage spans the city, the M1/M69/A6 corridor and the wider Leicestershire footprint towards Loughborough, Coalville, Hinckley, Market Harborough and Melton Mowbray. Programmes for social housing clients are typically delivered in tenant-access tranches; HMO inspection cycles are coordinated with Leicester City Council's licensing schedule. PAS 9980 FRAEW assessments are delivered by Level 5/Level 6 fire engineers; fire door inspections by FDIS-qualified inspectors.