About this Event
The Grenfell Tower fire was a tragedy for people, buildings, systems and leadership. The Inquiry revealed how those elements interacted. The operational response highlighted the difficulty of command when reality outstrips training & doctrine; but the final report showed deeper fragmentation of the wider fire safety system. The challenge now is whether the sector can learn collectively, organise coherently, and sustain reform long after the headlines have moved on.
The WCOFF session therefore will begin by reflecting on the purpose and nature of a public inquiry, drawing on Prof McGuirk’s experience as an expert witness to the Grenfell Tower Inquiry and considering how such inquiries gather evidence, reconstruct events and turn hindsight into formal public learning.
It will then draw out the main themes from the Grenfell Inquiry’s final report, before focusing on one operational strand: the operational and command challenges faced as the fire developed in ways that were outside normal expectation, doctrine and experience.
The session will consider what this tells us about decision-making under pressure, the limits of procedure, the difficulty of recognising system failure in real time, and the way operational events are later judged through the lens of inquiry.
It will conclude by looking beyond Grenfell to the continuing risk of fragmentation of the wider fire sector, the purpose of the Fire Sector Confederation, and the role of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Fire Safety and Rescue in helping to sustain attention, learning and reform.
The Netflix documentary, Grenfell Uncovered is a BAFTA-winning documentary, offering a powerful and insightful exploration beyond the scope of this session.
This is an open access event. There is a discount for members of The Worshipful Company of Firefighters and others who are members of City Livery Companies.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Lloyds of London, The Old Library, 1 Lime Street, London, United Kingdom
GBP 25.00 to GBP 45.00












