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National Federation of Builders


FieldValue
nameNational Federation of Builders
abbreviationNFB
formation1896
statusNot-profit organisation
purposeEnglish and Welsh building industry
locationSpectrum House, Suite AF29, Beehive Ring Road, Gatwick, West Sussex, RH6 0LG
region_servedEngland and Wales
membership1,400 building companies
leader_titleChief Executive
leader_nameRichard Beresford
affiliationsHouse Builders Association
websiteNFB

NFB Cymru (Wales)

NFB Heritage Major Contractors Group

The National Federation of Builders (NFB) is a United Kingdom trade association representing the interests of regional contractors and small and medium sized house builders (up to 250 homes per annum) in England and Wales.

With three other trade associations, it is represented on the UK government's Strategic Forum for Construction through the Construction Alliance.

History

It was founded in 1896. In 2024, it announced plans to merge with its Scottish counterpart, the Scottish Building Federation.

Structure

A non-profit organisation, the National Federation of Builders (NFB) is an independent federation which supplies business and training services to builders, constructors, contractors and house builders across England and Wales. Its website provides a public list of NFB-approved builders and a find a builder service.

The NFB includes the House Builders Association (HBA), NFB Heritage, the Major Contractors Group (MCG) and NFB Cymru.

The organisation has three main departments looking after member concerns; training, policy and membership services. Membership is split into eight regions; Southern, South West, Eastern, Midlands, North East, North West, London and Wales.

NFB members are eligible for offers, discounted products and services through Associate members and advice lines.

Policy

The NFB policy team is split into construction and housebuilding, allowing it to campaign on different agendas.

Construction

After a long campaign, the NFB was instrumental in the implementation of the Prompt Payment Code, which checks when large business pays their suppliers. Working alongside Peter Aldous, the NFB lobbied for retentions to be put into trust, meaning if there are any insolvencies in the supply chain, those who are owed money are insulated from any losses.

Housebuilding

The British Government's housing white paper, titled, 'Fixing the broken housing market' had a heavy focus on 'diversifying the housing market' and was largely influenced by the HBA, who has been lobbying the Government to understand the negative impact of housing policy on small and medium sized housebuilders (SMEs) over the last twenty years, which saw 80% of SMEs leaving the industry in the last thirty years. The Government has been persuaded to do more to help SMEs, who train four in five construction apprentices and are the predominant rural employers by improving housing site allocations in local plans. The HBA secured policy in the housing white paper update, that meant at least 10% of the sites allocated for residential development in local plans should be on sites of 0.5 hectare or less. This is in addition to the windfall allowance. The HBA had initially asked for this percentage to be 30%, after 20% was proposed; however, this was downgraded after push back from local authorities.

Previous collaborations with Natural England on their district licensing for great crested newts proved that there was an appetite and ability for the construction industry to support conservation while improving the planning process. The HBA therefore became involved on writing guidance and setting metrics for biodiversity net gain, which leaves the environment in a better state than when development began. As the only building trade association who rejected exemptions for small sites, the HBA is certain that the policy can be a springboard to both protect the environment and establish a new conservation and biodiversity industry. Work on ongoing for net gain, which will be mandated sometime in 2019.

Public procurement

NFB has commented on inappropriate use of credit reports in local government construction procurement, which can discriminate against smaller businesses, and supported the use of PAS 91, a standardised pre-qualification questionnaire for the construction industry.

References

References

  1. "Professional organisations in the building industry".
  2. "National Federation of Builders".
  3. (14 June 2024). "Building trade bodies announce merger". Construction News.
  4. (January 22, 2018). "NFB urge reduction of late payment and retentions in construction industry".
  5. (February 25, 2020). "Retentions are the construction industry's best hope, says NFB".
  6. "Fixing our broken housing market".
  7. "News Archive".
  8. (February 25, 2020). "The Government is letting apprentices down - NFB".
  9. Percival, Housing White Paper and Legal Update-Small Sites, CIL and Section 106 | Howes. "Housing White Paper and Legal Update – Small Sites, CIL and Section 106 | Howes Percival".
  10. (30 July 2018). "Revisions to the National Planning Policy Framework".
  11. (30 January 2025). "Great crested newts: district level licensing schemes".
  12. (April 12, 2019). "HBA Column | Biodiversity gain".
  13. (13 March 2019). "Government to mandate 'biodiversity net gain' - Defra in the media".
  14. Cross, L., [https://www.constructionnews.co.uk/sections/news/councils-use-pass-or-fail-credit-checks-on-2-1bn-of-sme-bids-17-06-2013/ Councils use ''pass or fail'' credit checks on £2.1bn of SME bids], ''Construction News'', published 17 June 2013, accessed 25 August 2023
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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