Of all the duty holder roles introduced by the Building Safety Act 2022, the Principal Designer (Building Regulations) has generated the most confusion — and the most risk for those who misunderstand it. It is frequently conflated with the CDM Principal Designer, delegated to the lead architect by default, or appointed far too late in the design process to discharge effectively. The consequences, at Gateway 2 stage, can be severe.

This article explains what the Building Regulations Principal Designer role actually requires, how it differs from the CDM role, what competence looks like in practice, and what the BSR will scrutinise when reviewing a Gateway 2 submission.

Two Principal Designers: The Distinction That Matters

Since the Building Safety Act, there are two distinct Principal Designer duties on any higher-risk building project:

Aspect CDM Principal Designer Building Regs Principal Designer
Legal basis Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 Building Safety Act 2022 / Building Regulations 2010 as amended
Primary focus Pre-construction health and safety risks Building Regulations compliance across all Approved Documents
Appointed by Client (CDM client) Client (developer / employer)
Can be same person? Yes — but only where a single individual demonstrably holds competence for both roles. In practice, this is rare on complex HRBs.

The Building Safety Act 2022 created the Building Regulations Principal Designer role to ensure there is a single identifiable person responsible for coordinating Building Regulations compliance across the design team throughout the design phase. This is a substantively different obligation from the CDM role, and the two should not be casually merged.

The Legal Duties: What the BSA Requires

The Building Regulations 2010 (as amended by SI 2023/907) impose the following duties on the Principal Designer (Building Regulations) for higher-risk buildings:

Coordinate design work for compliance

The Principal Designer must plan, manage, monitor and coordinate the design phase to ensure that the design, as developed, complies with all applicable Building Regulations requirements. This is not a passive audit function — it requires active participation in design decision-making and the ability to challenge the design team when compliance risks are identified.

Maintain the Golden Thread

The Principal Designer is responsible, during the design phase, for ensuring that the Golden Thread of information — the comprehensive, structured record of all design decisions relevant to safety — is maintained and updated. This includes recording the basis for key design decisions, documenting changes and ensuring that information is held in a form that can be accessed and used at Gateway 3 and beyond.

Support Gateway applications

The Principal Designer must cooperate with the client and Principal Contractor in preparing the Gateway 2 submission. In practice, this means authoring or reviewing compliance statements, ensuring that duty holder information is accurate and complete, and confirming that the design documents submitted to the BSR accurately represent the designed scheme.

Change control

During the design phase and into construction, the Principal Designer must ensure that any changes to the design are assessed for their compliance implications before being implemented. This is not merely administrative — it requires technical judgment about whether a proposed change affects compliance with any Approved Document.

Competence Requirements

The most significant shift introduced by the Building Safety Act regime is the statutory competence requirement for duty holders. The Principal Designer must have the skills, knowledge, experience and behaviours to fulfil the role. For higher-risk buildings, this is assessed against the frameworks set out in BSI Flex 8670 (Competence of Individuals Working on Higher-Risk Buildings) and the RIBA/CABE guidance on Principal Designer competence.

In practice, the BSR expects to see evidence of:

The BSR has been explicit that membership of a professional body — RIBA, RICS, IStructE — does not in itself constitute evidence of competence for this role. The assessment is specific to the Principal Designer (Building Regulations) function.

What the BSR Looks for in a Gateway 2 Submission

When reviewing a Gateway 2 application, the BSR's assessors will scrutinise the Principal Designer's contribution on several levels:

Has the Principal Designer been appointed in writing at an appropriate stage? Late appointments — at Stage 4, shortly before submission — are a red flag. The BSR will ask how the Principal Designer could have coordinated design compliance if they were not involved until the design was substantially complete.

Is there evidence of active design review? A Principal Designer who has genuinely fulfilled the role will have produced design review records, compliance tracking matrices, risk registers or equivalent documentation. A submission that contains compliance statements but no evidence of a coordinated design process is vulnerable to requisition.

Do the competence documents meet the required standard? The Principal Designer's competence evidence must be specific and substantive. The BSR has issued requisitions where competence evidence consisted of a CV and a professional membership certificate without further detail.

Is the Golden Thread started? The Gateway 2 submission should include at least an outline of how the Golden Thread will be maintained through construction. A Principal Designer who cannot articulate their approach to information management at Gateway 2 stage has likely not engaged seriously with the role.

Common Failures

The following failures are consistently identified in BSR Gateway 2 requisitions relating to the Principal Designer role:

Applicable Legislation and Guidance

Primary legislation: Building Safety Act 2022, sections 4–6, 37–39
Secondary legislation: Building Regulations etc. (Amendment) (England) Regulations 2023 (SI 2023/907)
Competence frameworks: BSI Flex 8670:2022 (v2); PAS 8671:2022 (competence of organisations); RIBA/CABE Principal Designer guidance (2023)
BSR guidance: HSE Dutyholder Roles Guidance for Higher-Risk Buildings (current edition)

The Principal Designer (Building Regulations) role is one of the most substantive and legally consequential positions on any higher-risk building project. Appointing the right person, at the right time, with the right evidence of competence — and then ensuring they genuinely fulfil the role — is not optional. It is the foundation on which a credible Gateway 2 submission is built.

Need support with Principal Designer duties? We can help.

We provide Principal Designer (Building Regulations) services and advisory support for higher-risk buildings across England, including competence evidence preparation, design review coordination and Gateway 2 submission support.

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