Fire safety work approved for court cells

News imageMoJ/City of York Council The interior of a holding cell with white-painted walls and a white ceiling. A doorway on the right-hand side leads into an adjoining corridor.
A thick red line has been digitally overlaid onto the image, running across the ceiling and down the wall above the doorway. Large black lettering painted onto the wall reads: ANY DAMAGE TO THIS CELL WILL RESULT IN PROSECUTION.MoJ/City of York Council
The proposed location of fire safety equipment shown in red in a cell in York Crown Court

Prisoners and staff at York Crown Court are at risk because holding cells lack heat and smoke detectors, according to plans approved by City of York Council.

A Ministry of Justice (MoJ) scheme will see fire detection equipment installed in nine cells within the Grade I listed building.

The work is part of a national programme to improve fire safety across the justice estate.

"The proposed works are to the interior of the building, to provide enhanced fire detection and safety for defendants and custody suite security staff," the MoJ said.

City of York Council planning officers approved the scheme despite acknowledging it would cause a degree of harm to the building.

Officers concluded that harm would be "less than substantial" and outweighed by the public benefits of improving safety.

News imageBBC/Oli Constable The front of a neoclassical building constructed from pale beige stone. The building is symmetrical, with a grand central entrance approached by a wide flight of stone steps. Six large columns support a projecting portico and triangular pediment above the entrance. Black wrought-iron railings line the front boundary and frame gateways on either side of the entrance.BBC/Oli Constable
Plans noted people held in cells and staff were at risk due to the lack of heat and smoke detectors

The detectors and cabling are to be installed in nine cells beneath the court.

The Local Democracy Reporting Service said HM Prison and Probation Service had committed to ensuring all prison accommodation met fire safety standards by 2027, after a review found about a quarter of occupied prison places did not comply.

According to National Audit Office figures published in 2024, that equated to about 23,000 prison places.

In its application, the MoJ said the works had been designed to minimise any impact on the historic building while improving safety.

Planning officers stated the cells were an important part of the court's historic function in the administration of justice.

However, they said the proposed alterations would be "minimal", with cabling following existing routes where possible.

Officers said: "There is public benefit. The submission explains the necessity of the works and reasonably justifies the approach."

Designed by architect John Carr, York Crown Court was built in the 1770s and forms part of the York Castle complex.

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