Call for ‘grandfather clause’ in legislation for architects’ register

logo_riaiHundreds of people who have been practising as architects for many years have appealed for a “grandfather clause” to be introduced in legislation which would give them automatic entry on a new register for the profession. Members of the Architects’ Alliance told the Oireachtas Environment Committee yesterday that their members risked ending up “on the streets” and being fined or imprisoned because of their “exclusion” from the new register.

Since last November only people whose name is on the register operated by the Royal Institute of Architects in Ireland (RIAI) are entitled to call themselves architects. Members of the alliance, who provide architectural services but may not have formal qualifications in architecture, are entitled to apply for registration. However, they must first go through a technical assessment procedure in which their CV and work is judged by a panel of architects.

It was unfair to expect “grandfathers” to jump over the new hurdles put in place under the new system, which was designed for academically-trained people, alliance spokesman Brian Montaut told the committee yesterday.

The Irish Times