London Belgravia Brokers
Independent Risk Advisory for Complex Developments

Alex Lyons, London Belgravia Brokers | Construction Business Review | Top Construction Risk and Warranty Advisory in UKAlex Lyons, Commercial Director
Why was London Belgravia Brokers founded to address gaps in insurance advisory services?

Over a decade ago, Giles Fallan, now founder-CEO of UK-based specialist insurance consultancy London Belgravia Brokers (LBB), stepped away from the insurer side of the latent defects insurance (LDI) market because he believed client service had fallen short. Insurers presented developers with quotations, but rarely with the strategic guidance needed to understand how they truly assessed risk. He established LBB to change that dynamic, embedding independence, insurer-side insight and long-term advocacy into its operating model from the outset.

“Transparency sits at the very centre of our work. We act as advocates for our clients in a very complex and fast-moving LDI market,” says Alex Lyons, commercial director.

How does insurer-side experience enhance advisory capabilities across the latent defects insurance market?

That advocacy draws on direct experience and a deliberate career decision. Much of the senior team moved from warranty providers and insurance groups into advisory roles for a specific reason. Over time, insurers began shifting their appetites: some toward high-volume, lower-value housing risks; others toward singular high-value towers. Those appetites rarely overlapped. Moving to the broker side meant spanning the whole market whilst carrying insurer-side knowledge across — including an understanding of how underwriters evaluate contractor track record, corporate strength, design specification and structural exposure — which enables a genuine full-market review.

Independence reinforces that approach. LBB places business across the whole latent defect insurance market, including with providers that transact directly with developers. Where the strongest solution sits outside a brokered placement, LBB makes that recommendation openly. Where the correct answer is to stay with an existing provider, LBB says so and steps back, trusting the relationship will bring the client back on the next project. That same full-market review has also identified comparable, robust, A-rated insurer options for PLC clients where incumbent arrangements no longer represent the best fit, delivering significant premium efficiencies within a single year.

Getting Ahead of Risk

Why is early-stage engagement critical for managing risk in complex development projects?

Alignment between client and insurer begins long before policy placement. Every project carries a distinct dynamic: a self-build differs fundamentally from a 15-unit housing scheme and a regional housebuilder delivering 1,000 homes operates under different pressures than a 60-storey urban tower. Effective advisory begins with understanding what the client intends to deliver, who the end user will be and how the corporate structure and funding arrangements are configured.

Early engagement has become particularly critical under the UK’s evolving building safety framework. Gateway Two requires complete design and material specification approval before construction can commence, yet those same decisions directly influence whether an insurer will provide a structural warranty. Developers have secured gateway approval and are prepared to mobilise on site, only to discover that specified materials fall outside the insurer’s appetite. Returning to redesign at that stage introduces delays, rework and increased project exposure.

Transparency sits at the very centre of our work. We act as advocates for our clients in a very complex and fast-moving LDI market.

Sometimes the consequential detail appears small. On a high-rise tower, specifying windows that can only be removed externally via scaffolding rather than internally via lift access may look like a minor design choice. In the event of a defect, it can mean the difference between a straightforward internal removal and closing a road to erect scaffolding. The cost implications of those two scenarios are materially different. Catching that consideration at the design stage rather than after completion is precisely the kind of early insight that protects both programme certainty and insurability.

Financial robustness forms another core layer of review. Under latent defects insurance, developers retain liability for the first two years following completion. Many large schemes operate through single-purpose vehicles, which require analysis of parent-company guarantees, cross-company support and, in some cases, offshore funding structures. Where appropriate, LBB introduces bonds or escrow arrangements to strengthen underwriting confidence and maintain competitive premiums.

How does coordinated advisory support help resolve complex redevelopment and engineering challenges?

That coordination becomes critical in complex redevelopment schemes. During the transformation of Surrey County Hall in Kingston upon Thames, a Grade II-listed civic building being converted by London Square Developments into a 292-apartment mixed-use community, heritage constraints and structural considerations limited the insurer's appetite. Working with Approved Consultant Services and ACS Engineering, LBB secured structural warranty cover with A-rated insurer Build-Zone, allowing the £75 million project to proceed with a robust warranty framework in place.

Staying at the Table

When design or construction questions reach an impasse, LBB brings the right people together. Where email exchanges between parties harden into competing technical positions, getting engineers in the same room, with LBB’s own people sitting alongside the client, more often than not, produces a solution. It is peripheral support rather than formal instruction, but it is the kind of support clients rely upon.

From feasibility and quotation evaluation through construction and certificate delivery, engagement remains continuous, sometimes spanning two or three-year build cycles. Most brokers arrive, place the business and consider their work done. LBB stays with the client throughout, as an extension of their team rather than a transactional intermediary, which is precisely why Fallan founded the firm in the first place.

Deep Dive

Selecting Construction Risk and Warranty Advisory in the UK

Construction risk and warranty advisory has become a central concern for developers, lenders and infrastructure investors across the United Kingdom. Expanding building safety legislation, tighter lender oversight and rising liability exposure have transformed structural warranty planning from a late-stage requirement into a strategic project consideration. Senior executives responsible for development financing and delivery increasingly recognise that warranty strategy now influences regulatory approvals, project design and long-term asset protection. Latent defect insurance sits at the centre of this shift. The market that provides structural warranties remains highly specialised and relatively small, yet the financial consequences of inadequate coverage can be substantial. Lenders rely on warranties to protect property value and ensure future transferability. Insurance providers examine design specifications, contractor capability and financial stability before accepting risk. A poorly structured warranty approach can introduce exclusions, increase premiums or disrupt financing arrangements. Early advisory engagement, therefore, carries significant weight. Many underwriting decisions depend on design and material specifications chosen during the planning stage. Regulatory requirements reinforce this dependency. The UK Building Safety framework now requires large developments to satisfy strict gateway approvals before construction begins. Design documentation, material selection and safety systems must meet regulatory expectations before projects can proceed. Warranty eligibility frequently intersects with these regulatory requirements, meaning insurance considerations introduced too late can trigger costly redesigns or delays in construction mobilisation. Financial credibility forms another major dimension of the process. Insurers evaluate the developer’s corporate structure alongside the building's physical characteristics. Large projects frequently operate through special-purpose vehicles that exist solely for a single development. Underwriters often request additional financial assurances in such cases, including parent-company guarantees, bonds or escrow arrangements that protect against insolvency during early liability periods. Advisory partners that analyse developer finances, contractor capability and funding structures early in the process can improve insurer confidence and maintain competitive premium positioning. Access to the full latent defect insurance market also matters. The UK warranty landscape consists of a small group of specialist providers whose underwriting preferences vary widely. Some insurers concentrate on high-volume residential schemes, while others focus on complex high-value towers or urban regeneration developments. Advisors that maintain visibility across the entire market can test multiple underwriting perspectives, evaluate pricing differences and identify insurers whose appetite aligns with the project profile. Technical understanding of construction and design increasingly strengthens advisory outcomes. Structural systems, façade materials and building interfaces often determine whether an insurer accepts risk. Advisors who understand construction practices can help developers anticipate insurance responses during design development. Industry experience suggests that many disagreements between insurers and developers stem from technical interpretation rather than fundamental risk rejection. Bringing developers, engineers and insurers into direct discussion frequently resolves these conflicts and clarifies acceptable design approaches. Within this demanding environment, LBB London Belgravia has established a focused position in the UK latent defect insurance market. The firm’s leadership team previously worked inside insurance organisations, providing insight into underwriting expectations and insurer decision frameworks. That experience allows it to review the entire warranty market while remaining independent of individual providers. LBB examines project structure, design strategy and regulatory considerations early in development, ensuring insurance alignment before finalising construction commitments. Its advisory model also incorporates in-house technical expertise that helps bridge conversations between developers, insurers and regulators. By maintaining independence across the specialist LDI market and remaining involved throughout the construction lifecycle—from quotation review to certificate delivery—LBB positions itself as a long-term advisory partner rather than a transactional broker. ...Read more