Close Menu
Flat Living
    Latest Articles
    August 5, 2025

    Communal Services: An Essential Maintenance Checklist For Block Property Managers

    August 5, 2025

    Residential Fire Door Inspections Explained: Your Legal and Practical Guide

    July 30, 2025

    How RMC Directors Can Safeguard Their Interests When Changing Managing Agent

    July 29, 2025

    What Does the Energy Act 2023 Mean for Property Management?

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Flat Living Sponsorship
    • Get In Touch
    • Directory
    • Subscribe
    LinkedIn Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Flat Living
    • Block Management
      • Manage Your Block
        • Self Manage
        • Using a Managing Agent
        • Right to Manage
        • Forming a RMC
        • Managing Listed Flats
        • Communal Areas
      • Lease
        • About Your Lease
        • Buying Your Freehold
        • Extending Your Lease
      • Service Charges
        • About Service Charges
        • Service Charge Accounting
        • Collections and Arrears
        • Section 20
      • Health & Safety
        • Asbestos – Air – Water
        • Employing Contractors
        • Fire Protection
        • Fire Regulation
        • Health & Safety Law
      • Insurance
        • Buying Insurance for Your Block
        • Insurance Risk Management
        • Reinstatement Cost Assessment
        • Insurance for Communal Areas
        • Water Damage Prevention
        • Insurance for Buy to Let Landlords
        • Directors & Officers Liability Insurance
        • Making a Claim
      • Disputes
        • Landlord Disputes
        • Neighbour Disputes
        • Property Disputes
      • Major Works
        • About Major Works
        • Party Walls and Neighbour Matters
        • Section 20
      • Cleaning & Maintenance
        • Cleaning
        • Grounds
        • Maintenance
      • Communal Facilities
        • Lifts
        • EV Charging
        • Door Access and Gates
        • Heating & Utilities
        • Lighting
        • TV and Telecoms
      • Emergencies
        • Break-Ins
        • Lift
        • Out of Hours
        • Roof
        • Water
      • Software
      • Case Law
      • Customer Service & Marketing
      • FAQ
    • Leaseholders
      • Manage Your Block
        • Self Manage
        • Using a Managing Agent
        • Right to Manage
        • Forming a RMC
        • Managing Listed Flats
        • Communal Areas
      • Lease
        • About Your Lease
        • Buying Your Freehold
        • Extending Your Lease
      • Service Charges
        • About Service Charges
        • Collections and Arrears
        • Service Charge Accounting
        • Section 20
      • Disputes
        • Landlord Disputes
        • Neighbour Disputes
        • Property Disputes
      • Major Works
        • About Major Works
        • Party Walls and Neighbour Matters
        • Section 20
      • Communal Facilities
        • Lifts
        • EV Charging
        • Door Access and Gates
        • Heating & Utilities
        • Lighting
        • TV and Telecoms
      • Software
      • Landlords
        • Buying a Flat
        • Letting a Flat
        • Selling a Flat
      • Emergencies
        • Break-Ins
        • Lift
        • Out of Hours
        • Roof
        • Water
      • FAQ
    • Lifestyle
    • News
      • Industry News
      • Interviews
      • Opinion
      • Jobs
      • Flat Living Back Issues
    • Events, Training and Jobs
      • Events
      • Training
      • Jobs
    • Block Services
      • Flat Living Directory
    • Industry Associations
      • ARMA
      • ARHM
      • ALEP
      • FPRA
      • IRPM
      • Leasehold Advisory Service
      • Property Redress Scheme
      • National Leasehold Group
      • RICS
      • The Property Ombudsman
    Flat Living
    Home » I’ve inherited an EV Charge Point – Now What?

    I’ve inherited an EV Charge Point – Now What?

    0
    By Flat Living on May 1, 2022 Car Parking and Vehicle Chargers


    Written by Jamie Willsdon, Director of Future Fuel.

    If you’re managing a block with developer-fitted EV chargepoints, you may be congratulating yourself for having side-stepped the well-documented problems around installing chargers in residential blocks. In fact, you may not have got off as lightly as you thought says Jamie Willsdon.

    The market for electric vehicles has really taken off in the last few years, bolstered by government grants and the drive towards net zero. And it is likely to be given even more of a boost by recent hikes in petrol and diesel prices. Identifying the opportunities presented by the expansion of this sector, EV consultant Future Fuel – part of maintenance and facilities specialist Future Group – launched in 2019 to provide charge point maintenance services and installation advice for residential block managers.

    Developers are now expected to install EV chargers in new blocks as standard, with building regulations updated for 2022 setting out guidelines around the number of active chargers that must be provided for residents. This can mean as few as 10% or as many as 80% of parking spaces being given access to a live charge point. However, despite specifying that charge points must be made available to residents, the guidelines fall short when it comes to detailing how those chargers should be maintained or how the cost of the electricity supplied to them should be dealt with.

    As a result, Future Fuel is now seeing problems with the charging infrastructure at the sites it visits. Issues that originate from the development stage are becoming more common in leasehold blocks and it is apparent that more work needs to be done to help both developers, and further down the line property managers, to understand the issues surrounding the provision of EV charge points.

    These are some of the problems that are now coming to light:

    Design/ Location of Chargers

    Charge points are often installed in the parking spaces that are located nearest to the electrical supply. This seems logical – but no attention is being paid to the fact that parking bays are generally demised to residents under their lease and they may not be the leaseholders who own an electric vehicle. Those without EVs have chargers in their assigned bay and vice versa.

    Parking is already a hugely emotive topic for leaseholders – it shouldn’t be exacerbated by residents having to negotiate with their neighbours in order to charge their car.

    Chargers Are Left Open to Use

    Developers frequently install the type of charge point that a homeowner would have in their driveway – directly connected to their electricity supply and open to anyone to use. This is not normally a problem in a domestic situation because you would be likely to notice a strange car parked in your driveway, connected to your charge point. Someone would need a lot of front to abuse a home-installed charger in this way. Not so in a block of flats.

    If chargers are left open, without a smart billing system in place, the electricity is effectively free at the point of use. This means that all residents, regardless of whether or not they have an EV themselves, are unknowingly paying an additional charge for someone else’s electricity usage. With the cost of energy surging, this situation is unlikely to make the property manager in charge of the block very popular. It needs immediate investigation so that a solution to ensure correct billing can be put in place at the earliest opportunity.

    Lack of Maintenance

    EV charge points are high-powered electrical installations and need regular maintenance. Like any communal electricity supply, systems must be tested and confirmed safe for continued use. There is a general lack of knowledge among block managers around this issue, and there is frequently no cleaning or regular planned maintenance schedule in place. This is crucial if residents are to be kept safe and charger performance maximised.

    Finding Solutions

    It is absolutely clear that money is being wasted and compliance with health & safety – although not specifically regulated for the use of charge points – is not being properly considered. So what’s the solution?

    Future Group hopes that the Government will recognise the problem and make changes to the building regulations, providing clear specifications around charger installations for block managers. In the meantime, property managers are encouraged to review and evaluate their charge point infrastructure, and to invest in a survey to detail their existing chargers and to make recommendations around system security and maintenance.

    There is funding available this year that property managers may be considering taking advantage of if they are operating blocks without chargers already in place. Should they do so, it is vital that they install and maintain their EVC infrastructure correctly, minimising wasted energy, cutting any additional cost to residents – and keeping the hassle factor to a minimum.

    Jamie Willsdon is director of Future Fuel. He can be contacted via: [email protected] | 0203 826 9999 Option 4 or www.future-group.uk/ev.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Flat Living
    • Website
    • Facebook
    • X (Twitter)
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn

    At Flat Living we provide information and guidance from leading industry contributors for leaseholders, residents management companies, residents associations, Right to Manage Companies, Freeholders, Landlords and Property Managing Agents.

    Related Posts

    Powering up the future: A complete guide to EV charging in multi-unit buildings

    Managing Risks: Electric Vehicle Charging Points in Residential Car Parks

    Ozev Funding for EV Chargers to End the 31st of  March 2025: Act Now Before Time Runs Out

    Comments are closed.

    Latest Articles
    August 5, 2025

    Communal Services: An Essential Maintenance Checklist For Block Property Managers

    August 5, 2025

    Residential Fire Door Inspections Explained: Your Legal and Practical Guide

    July 30, 2025

    How RMC Directors Can Safeguard Their Interests When Changing Managing Agent

    July 29, 2025

    What Does the Energy Act 2023 Mean for Property Management?

    • Manage Your Block
    • Lease
    • Health & Safety
    • Insurance
    • Disputes
    • Major Works
    • Cleaning and Maintenance
    • Communal Facilities
    • Software
    • Landlords
    • Events, Training and Jobs
    • Customer Service & Marketing
    • Case Law
    • News
    • Interviews
    • Opinion
    About Flat Living

    Flat Living is a trading name of www.flat-living.co.uk Ltd.  Registered Office: 29 Waterloo Road, Wolverhampton WV1 4DJ

    Registered in England and Wales CRN No. 06738048.

    Quick Site Links
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Industry Associations
    • Flat Living Sponsorship
    Search This Website
    • Home
    • Get In Touch
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Notice

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.