Alarm raised over DCMS overruling official listing advice

This article was first published by the Twentieth Century Society.

In news broken exclusively by the AJ, C20 Society and other heritage campaigners have voiced alarm after figures showed a leap in ministers rejecting advice to protect historic buildings from the Government’s own statutory advisor.

Analysis carried out by the Architects’ Journal using Freedom of Information, showed that 80% of the instances of ministers at the Department for Culture Media and Sport (DCMS) rejecting advice from Historic England to list historic buildings over the past five years have taken place in the last 12 months under Labour.

Recent rejections include Bath Fire Station (1938-39), Shoreditch Fire Station (1963-64), BBC Brookmans Park Transmitting Station (1928-29) and, we can reveal for the first time, Stansted Airport (Foster + Partners, 1991) – a truly groundbreaking design and one of the finest achievements of the High-Tech movement.

In most cases, listing recommendations from Historic England are waved through by DCMS. From September 2021 to September 2025 there were just 10 instances of such advice being rejected, with eight of these occurring in the last year including three in September alone, the figures show. In every case, Historic England had recommended the building was listed at Grade II and in almost every case, the site in question was subject to development proposals, raising the question of whether the Government’s drive to remove the ‘blockers’ to economic growth is now imperilling our national heritage.