We've updated our Privacy and Cookies Policy
We've made some important changes to our Privacy and Cookies Policy and we want you to know what this means for you and your data.
No vote on Parliament renovation for 18 months
MPs will not decide how to repair the crumbling Houses of Parliament for another 18 months, the government says.
Commons Leader Andrea Leadsom has proposed a new "delivery body" to assess the costs of the three options put forward to renovate the estate.
Parts of the 150-year-old building, which contains asbestos and outdated cabling, are sinking.
Ms Leadsom said successive governments had been "patching and mending" the Grade 1 listed building.
"We do have to get going on this," she added.
MPs will vote on establishing the delivery body by Christmas and it will take 18 months for it to report back, she told 大象传媒 Radio 4's The World at One.
Parliament will then make a "final decision", she said.
It marks the latest stage of the long-running debate about the repairs, which have been estimated to cost up to 拢5.7bn.
A report in 2012 warned that "major, irreversible damage" may be done to the building unless significant restoration work is carried out.
Three years later, an by industry experts was published, looking at three different approaches:
- A rolling programme of work, which would take longest and cost the most
- A "partial move-out", with first the Commons, then the Lords, moving out
- A "full move-out" whereby everybody would relocate while the building is repaired - the least expensive and quickest option
This was considered by MPs, who agreed to established a joint Commons and Lords committee to consider its findings.
In September 2016, the joint committee back, recommending the "full decant" option - so the estate is fully vacated while repairs are carried out.
But Ms Leadsom said there was a problem with this option - because the committee had not "bottomed out" its costs of this option.
She also said it was "extremely important" to maintain a "Parliamentary foothold" for tourism and school visits.
This could involve things like the state opening of Parliament and swearing in of MPs still taking place at Westminster during the repairs, she added.
Top Stories
More to explore
Most read
Content is not available