Centre of building science in the United Kingdom, owned by charitable organisation the BRE Trust
Building Research Establishment
Formation
1921; 103 years ago (1921)
Location
Garston, Hertfordshire, England
The Building Research Establishment (BRE) is a centre of
building science in the United Kingdom, owned by charitable organisation the BRE Trust. It is a former
UK government national laboratory that was
privatised in 1997. BRE provides research, advice, training, testing, certification and standards for both
public and
private sector organisations in the UK and abroad. It has its headquarters in
Garston, Hertfordshire, England, with regional sites in
Glasgow,
Swansea, the US, India, the Middle East and China.[1]
BRE is funded with income from commissioned research, commercial programmes and by a number of digital tools for use in the construction sector.
Programmes
BRE's certification arm, BRE Global, is an independent, third-party
certification body responsible for sustainability certification schemes such as BREEAM (for buildings and communities), CEEQUAL (for infrastructure), the Home Quality Mark (for housing) and LPCB certification (for fire and security products and services).
BRE's training arm, the BRE Academy, provides online and classroom courses on built environment related issues like sustainability, fire, resilience and building information modelling (BIM).
BRE also carries out research and data generation in support of national and international standards and
building codes, including the
UK building regulations. It also develops its own standards for responsible sourcing (BES 6001),[2] and ethical labour sourcing (BES 6002).[3]
BRE's digital tools include
construction waste management tool SMARTWaste and construction health, safety and wellbeing tool YellowJacket. It also has
UKAS accredited testing laboratories, and a publishing business in partnership with IHS Press called the BRE Bookshop.
Ownership
The Building Research Establishment is owned by the BRE Trust, a registered charity that works to support research and education in the built environment. All of the profits accrued by BRE are passed to the Trust and are used to fund new research and education programmes designed to meet the Trust's goal of promoting safety and
sustainability.
Over the last 20 years[when?] the BRE Trust has funded 117 PhDs on a total research programme of £15m, with other funding levered into the sector as a whole from research councils and
European Union research sources.
The BRE Trust also financially supports five university Centres of Excellence. One of the first Centres established was at the
University of Edinburgh in 2004, a research and education programme on fire safety engineering. The other centres are in
Strathclyde (energy utilisation),
Bath (construction materials),
Cardiff (
sustainable engineering), and
Brasilia (integrated and sustainable communities).
During the
Second World War, it was involved in the confidential research and development of the
bouncing bomb for use against the
Möhne Dam in the
Dambusters Raid of 1943[6] A small scale model of the dam used for testing can still be found at the Centre in Garston, Watford, today.
BRE was a founding member in 1976 of
BSRIA, the Building Services Research and Information Association and the
UK Green Building Council (UKGBC) in 2007.
From 1 January 2013, BRE took over the management of the UK and Ireland chapter of
BuildingSMART.[8]
In August 2016,
Constructing Excellence merged with BRE, with BRE undertaking to maintain the CE's brands and functions.[9]
Since the
Grenfell Tower fire(2017), BRE has been criticised for holding poor fire safety standards, all the while via reviewing cases like that of Grenfell.[10][11][12]
F.M. Lea (1971). Science and building: a history of the Building Research Station.
HMSO.
B.J. Rendle (1976). Fifty years of timber research: a short history of the Forest Products Research Laboratory, Princes Risborough.
HMSO.
ISBN978-0-11-670546-4.