Around 4,000 doors on homes in the London borough where the Grenfell tragedy took place are set to be replaced.
The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea is looking to replace all flat doors with ones which are fire-resistant for 30 minutes, the time stipulated in the current Building Regulation standards.
In March, it was revealed that an undamaged door from the Grenfell tower block was tested and found it could only withstand a blaze for 15 minutes - not the 30 for which it was designed.
Plans for the £3.5 million project will be discussed next week. The authority said the doors it would be replacing are "not necessarily deficient" in terms of fire risk assessments.
It added: "This is not currently a legislative requirement, but this may change following the completion of the current building regulations review."
Seventy-one people died when a fire ravaged the residential building on June 14 last year.
The fire in the 24-storey tower block in west London in June is now subject to a public inquiry. The cladding, installed as part of a multi-million pound refurbishment, has been blamed for the rapid spread of the blaze which began with a fire in a fridge-freezer on the fourth floor.
Meanwhile, a report has found that voluntary organisations filled the void left by a lack of official direction in the wake of the disaster.
The report, Mind The Gap: A Review Of The Voluntary Sector Response To The Grenfell Tragedy, found that many voluntary organisations stepped up to the challenge of meeting the needs of the community where the statutory authorities fell short, particularly in the early stages.
Video: How the Grenfell Tower disaster happened
Although they too found it hard to co-ordinate in the early days after the disaster, the report found that the organisations demonstrated effective action in the immediate and longer-term response phases, despite their lack of experience of UK disaster situations.
The institutional response to the disaster was "badly flawed in the first crucial days, and the damage that resulted has been difficult to repair", the report said, adding that the voluntary sector was "very much on the front line".
The report, commissioned by Muslim Aid, said: "The consequences of the disaster were compounded by the weak leadership of the response initially led by the local council, which was slow to provide direction, co-ordination and information and to address multiple pressing needs.
"Particularly in the first few weeks, this void was filled mainly by the community itself, supported by an array of local organisations and businesses, as well as individual volunteers and representatives from external organisations."
A Kensington and Chelsea Council spokesman said: "We are committed to learning the lessons from the Grenfell tragedy and therefore we welcome this report as part of the learning process.
"However, it is not right for the council to comment in detail at this stage - this is a matter for the public inquiry which is reviewing the events around the council's response to the tragedy.
"It is our responsibility to ensure that the whole, unvarnished truth is told so that lessons can be learned and to ensure that such a tragedy can never happen again. We will work with the inquiry to ensure this happens."