Site records as Gateway 3 evidence: collation, not archaeology
The BSR assesses Gateway 3 on evidence: as-built documents, change records and proof that what was installed matches what was approved. Contemporaneous site records, daily logs, photographs, inspection results, dated and attributable, are that proof. Projects that build the record as they build the building turn Gateway 3 into a collation exercise.
Why do site records decide Gateway 3?
Strip the four BSR-named stall reasons to their roots and they are one failure repeated: the project cannot prove what it built. Gaps in fire and structural documentation are missing records. Weak change control is missing records of decisions. As-built discrepancies are drawings that no record reconciles to reality. Missing commissioning evidence is, literally, missing records. The completion assessment is an evidence review, and site records are the evidence.
The distinction that matters to an assessor is contemporaneity. A record made at the time, by someone who was there, dated and attributable, proves something. A reconstruction assembled at completion, however sincere, merely asserts it. Eighteen months after the cavity barriers were covered up, the choice is between a dated photograph and somebody's memory, and only one of those shortens a determination.
What does a Gateway 3-ready record set look like?
It maps to what the application must demonstrate. Inspection and test plan results, signed and dated, for the safety-critical work. Photographic records of concealed work taken before it was concealed, tied to locations. Product and delivery records connecting what was specified to what arrived to where it went, so the as-built drawings and the manufacturer literature agree. Commissioning records for every safety system, because integration evidence is a named stall reason. And the change control log that explains every departure from the Gateway 2 approval, with its category, justification and revised drawings.
Two qualities separate a usable set from a pile: structure and attributability. Structure means the records file against the golden thread from the start, not into a to-be-sorted folder. Attributability means each record says who, when and where without forensic work. The test is brutal and simple: could a stranger, two years from now, prove your wall build-up from what you kept?
Where do site communications fit?
Honestly: most of a project's real-time record already exists, scattered across WhatsApp threads, site diaries, snagging apps and email. The foreman's photo of the firestopping before the boards went on, the message agreeing the revised detail, the morning note that the mock-up passed. The problem is not that the evidence was never created; it is that it was created in tools that lose it: unattributed, undated in any useful sense, unsearchable, and gone with a phone upgrade.
That is why contractors preparing seriously for Gateway 3, the pattern across the firms winning approvals on our Gateway Projects Tracker, are formalising exactly this: inspection-and-test evidence, photographic records and change discipline captured as work proceeds, into systems that keep the date, the author and the location attached. The brief's phrase for the goal is the right one: Gateway 3 as a collation exercise, not an archaeology project.
How do you set this up on a live project?
Start at Gateway 2, because the construction control plan and change control plan you submit there are promises about exactly this discipline. Assign ownership: one named role that audits the record weekly against the golden thread structure, trade by trade, while gaps are still photographable. Make the capture habit match how sites actually communicate, or it will not happen; a record system nobody uses is a stall reason with a licence fee. And treat the 8-week determination as the deadline it is: the evidence has to be complete when the application goes in, because that is the moment the archaeology bill, if you owe one, comes due.
Frequently asked questions
- What site records does Gateway 3 actually need?
- Records that prove the as-built condition: inspection and test results against the ITP, dated photographs of work before it was covered up, delivery and installation records tying products to locations, commissioning evidence for safety systems, and the change control log connecting every departure from the approved design to its justification.
- What makes a record contemporaneous?
- It was made at the time of the work by someone in a position to know, and it is dated and attributable. A site diary entry with photographs from the day the cavity barriers went in is contemporaneous. A statement written eighteen months later that the barriers were definitely installed is testimony, and the BSR's assessors know the difference.
- Whose job is the Gateway 3 evidence?
- The principal contractor controls the construction-phase records and the principal designer the design-side documentation, but the practical answer is that someone must own the evidence as a workstream from day one: collecting it trade by trade, filing it against the golden thread structure, and auditing gaps while the work is still open and photographable.
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This page is information, not legal advice. It is written and maintained by a practitioner, verified against primary sources on the date shown above, and corrected fast when the regime moves. Spotted something out of date? Tell us.