The building was converted to flats in 1989 from an office and warehouse building built in 1907. I understand that at the time Northern Counties Housing Association acquired it for £1. They clearly did the conversion on the cheap - which would have been the result of poor funding from Margaret Thatcher's government - as they simply fitted plaster board over the external-facing walls and fitted lower internal ceilings. The loose fitting sash windows were not draught sealed. No insulation was added between the plaster board and external walls. Fixtures like bathrooms were clearly job lots of auction clearances - our bathroom suite was a delightful avocado green for many years and a neighbour had a burgundy suite reminiscent of something from a brothel in a 70s movie.
The rent here was always relatively high for the size of the apartment - and they crammed in as many tiny apartments as they could get away with - but you pay for location and an M1 postcode was quite desirable back in the late 90s. However, for much of the time very little was done to maintain the building (including throughout the Blair/Brown governments) and ultimately the building was sold to the Guinness Partnership. (If anybody is tempted to rent a property from the Guinness Partnership make sure you know all the clauses in the tenancy first.)
The Guinness Partnership did nothing to maintain the property. For a central location in a listed building with high rents we would often come home to find the elevators not working and at one point during lockdown it was out for three weeks and some elderly/disabled residents were unable to leave their flats.
However, because of Grenfell the government seems to have thrown lots of money at certain sectors of social housing as for two years the building has been clad in scaffolding and the sunlight blocked out while a private contractor (rarely seen) supposedly repairs the roof. If only the money could be put towards replacing the barely functioning plumbing and employing a team of plumbers who could come out to a blockage (and solve the problem) within seven days. A functional heating system would also be beneficial.
Anyway I digress. Yes you are correct that this conversion could have been done much better. I guess if they were doing it now they'd fit a vapour barrier and celotex insulation between the exterior walls and the plaster board. The plumbing would be functional and the heating would be more efficient. My post was to comment on the current state of much of Britain's social housing. It could be upgraded but for buildings like this you would probably have to temporarily re-home all the tenants and gut it.
A thing I did not mention about this building, and one of the reasons we decided it was time to go is that Manchester City Council took control of who could live here. What was once a building tenanted by bohemian types, urban professionals (young and old) and many LGBT people who wanted to be close to the gay village has become a building filled more and more with drug addicts (functional or otherwise), refugees and asylum seekers. I have no problem with these groups of people but when concentrated in a building that barely functions because of poor construction it becomes somewhat unpleasant. And whoever thought it would be a good idea to place groups of people with very conservative religious beliefs in a building with a large LGBT population should be forced to stand between them in the elevator and observe the hatred and comments directed towards the LGBT people from those refugees and asylum seekers. And don't get me started on the number of times the refugees upstairs have flooded my apartment then refused to answer the door.
But anyway I've digressed again and now sound like a presenter from GB News. I am not that person, I am someone who has been placed in an impossible situation by the failure of the housing association to properly maintain the building and the local council who don't care about communities. I am, however, more fortunate than many of my fellow tenants in that I have substantial savings and a house to move into that I can insulate and maintain myself. I only wish it didn't have a gable end roof and was on a North-South axis so I could fit solar panels. Perhaps a wind turbine in the garden is an idea? Actually, thinking about the garden, subsidised ground source heat pumps would be a good start.