UKGBC launch the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap
At the beginning of July 2025 the UKGBC launched the first guidance of its kind, detailing how the UK's built environment will be impacted by climate hazards and how it can adapt.
The roadmap details how the UK's built environment, including homes, schools, offices, hospitals, parks, and infrastructure, are increasingly vulnerable to five climate hazards – overheating, flooding, drought, wildfires, and storms.
Modelling for the roadmap shows schools in London and the South East will likely face 10 weeks of extreme overheating risk in what is regarded as a 'low future warming scenario' of 2°C – an independent scientific project that tracks government climate action, predicts we are on course for a 2.7°C increase by the year 2100.
The roadmap identifies 13 areas across the country most vulnerable to extreme weather hazards, with the cathedral city of Peterborough, and the Welsh village of Fairbourne, to become 'likely uninhabitable' by the turn of the century because of flooding. Places susceptible to storm, wildfires and drought are also highlighted.
The roadmap also shows how buildings might be adapted to face a warmer and wetter future and calls on the government to treat climate resilience as a national emergency.
Some insights from the report include:
- The 13 areas of the UK most vulnerable to storms, floods, overheating, wildfires and drought are in London, Birmingham, Manchester, Peterborough, Nottingham, Leicester, Northampton, Gillingham, Glasgow, Lancaster, Scunthorpe and Weston-Super-Mare.
- Six million homes (houses and flats) in London and the South East will face two weeks in excess of 28°C a year in the low warming scenario, while healthcare buildings (doctors surgeries, healthcare centres and hospitals) are projected to face two weeks per year. Care homes in London and the South East will face temperatures in excess of 28°C for four weeks per year.
- Flooding will make Peterborough and Fairbourne 'likely uninhabitable' by the end of the century
The report also contains policy recommendations for government, including calls to create an Office for Resilience in the Cabinet office and restoring the role of Minister of Resilience, protecting all communities with trees, parks and ponds and creating a new generation of green professionals. The report sets out how built environment professionals can adopt a four-stage framework for embedding climate resilience into built environment decision-making across organisations and project teams.
Simon McWhirter, Chief Executive at UKGBC, said:
"The UK Climate Resilience Roadmap starkly illustrates the threats of a changing climate, not in the future, but right here, right now. The UK is not ready for the extreme weather events of today, even less so for the hotter, wetter and wilder climate that is already racing down the track at us.
Our homes, schools, hospitals, parks and offices are on the front line, protecting and nurturing us. They're the essential ingredients that keep us warm. safe and comfortable, the very fabric of our communities and society, and they are in danger. We need a fundamental rethink on this if we are to help protect people and our way of life.
While we need to keep doing everything we can to reduce the climate impacts ahead of us, in parallel we need to be preparing for a much hotter and more unpredictable world, now. With all the climate hazards that'll bring, from more flash floods to rampant overheating in our buildings. It would be irresponsible of us not to do that. Policies and actions pledged to date by governments across the world mean we are projected to hit 2.7 per cent of warming. So acting now is the only responsible choice; inaction wildly increases the risk, both morally and financially.
Delaying action is costing lives and livelihoods. It is why we need climate resilience to be treated as a national emergency and why we are calling on the government to create an Office for Resilience in the Cabinet Office, while restoring the role of Minister for Resilience. We are living through a changing climate, we must act now."
To find out more and to download the final report visit: https://ukgbc.org/our-work/topics/resilience-roadmap/
This article appears on the CIAT news and blog site as "UKGBC launch the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap" dated 30 June, 2025.
--CIAT
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Adaptability.
- Building Back Better: Resilience
- Building flood resilience.
- Business resilience.
- CIAT articles.
- Climate resilient places.
- Designing resilient cities: a guide to good practice (EP 103).
- Engineering in the 21st century.
- Engineering resilience to human threats.
- Environmental plan for building design and construction.
- Flood resilience.
- Future proofing construction.
- Hurricane design considerations.
- Interview with Julie Hirigoyen, UK-GBC.
- Managing and responding to disaster.
- Pressing pause to avoid errors.
- Property flood resilience.
- Re-evaluating the design life of buildings.
- Resilience
- Resilient infrastructure diversity and equity scorecard.
- Risk assessment.
- Shelter.
- Sustainability in building design and construction.
- Two steps towards a more resilient world.
- UK-GBC.
Featured articles and news
Latest Build UK Building Safety Regime explainer published
Key elements in one short, now updated document.
UKGBC launch the UK Climate Resilience Roadmap
First guidance of its kind on direct climate impacts for the built environment and how it can adapt.
CLC Health, Safety and Wellbeing Strategy 2025
Launched by the Minister for Industry to look at fatalities on site, improving mental health and other issues.
One of the most impressive Victorian architects. Book review.
Common Assessment Standard now with building safety
New CAS update now includes mandatory building safety questions.
RTPI leader to become new CIOB Chief Executive Officer
Dr Victoria Hills MRTPI, FICE to take over after Caroline Gumble’s departure.
Social and affordable housing, a long term plan for delivery
The “Delivering a Decade of Renewal for Social and Affordable Housing” strategy sets out future path.
A change to adoptive architecture
Effects of global weather warming on architectural detailing, material choice and human interaction.
The proposed publicly owned and backed subsidiary of Homes England, to facilitate new homes.
How big is the problem and what can we do to mitigate the effects?
Overheating guidance and tools for building designers
A number of cool guides to help with the heat.
The UK's Modern Industrial Strategy: A 10 year plan
Previous consultation criticism, current key elements and general support with some persisting reservations.
Building Safety Regulator reforms
New roles, new staff and a new fast track service pave the way for a single construction regulator.
Architectural Technologist CPDs and Communications
CIAT CPD… and how you can do it!
Cooling centres and cool spaces
Managing extreme heat in cities by directing the public to places for heat stress relief and water sources.
Winter gardens: A brief history and warm variations
Extending the season with glass in different forms and terms.
Restoring Great Yarmouth's Winter Gardens
Transforming one of the least sustainable constructions imaginable.