Many people remain unaccounted for following the deadly fire at a west London block of flats that killed 12.
Police have warned the number of deaths is expected to rise as they carry out a long and complex recovery operation.
One day on, fire crews, who rescued 65 adults and children, are still working to dampen the fire that ripped through Grenfell Tower in north Kensington.
PM Theresa May promised a full inquiry, as questions were being asked about the speed at which the fire spread.
Thirty-four people remain in hospital - 18 of whom are in a critical condition.
Firefighters were called to the 24-storey residential tower at 00:54 BST on Wednesday, at a time when hundreds of people were thought to have been inside, most of them sleeping.
Many were woken by neighbours, or shouts from below, and fled the building. Fire crews rescued dozens more, but some stayed in their homes, trapped by smoke and flames.
The cause of the fire remains unknown.
Dozens of people left homeless by the fire spent the night in makeshift rescue centres, as well-wishers signed a wall of condolence near the site.
Photographs have been left alongside messages for loved ones.
The local authority - Kensington and Chelsea council - said 44 households had been placed in emergency accommodation so far.
Cladding fires
Through the night, people have been donating food, clothes and blankets for those left without homes.
Bhupinder Singh, one volunteer handling donations, said: "It is times like this that the best of our community comes out. This is where you find out how good it is to live in England and how good it is to be a Londoner."
Questions have been raised about why the fire appeared to spread so quickly and engulf the entire building.
BBC Newsnight's Chris Cook says the type of claddingon the outside of Grenfell Tower, installed in 2015 during a refurbishment, had a polyethylene - or plastic - core, instead of a more fireproof alternative with a mineral core.
Similar cladding was used in high-rise buildings hit by fires in France, the UAE and Australia, he said.
The government has said checks were now planned on tower blocks that have gone through a similar upgrade.
Construction firm Rydon, which carried out the refurbishment, initially said in a statement that the work met "all fire regulations" - the wording was omitted in a later statement.
Concerns have also been raised about fire alarms not going off and the lack of sprinklers.
It is still possible to build tall buildings without sprinklers, said Russ Timpson of the Tall Buildings Fire Safety Network, but he expected regulations might change soon.
Overseas colleagues are "staggered" when they hear tall buildings are built in the UK with a single staircase, he added.
Appeals are being made on social media for news of friends and family who are still unaccounted for.
Among them is 12-year-old Jessica Urbano Ramirez, 66-year-old retired lorry driver Tony Disson and security guard Mo Tuccu, who was visiting friends in the tower to break the Ramadan fast.
An emergency number - 0800 0961 233 - has been set up for anyone concerned about friends or family.
Media captionA local nurse ran towards the burning building to try and help victims
By Wednesday evening, almost all of the building had been searched but crews were still trying to put out "pockets of fire" in hard to reach places, London Fire Brigade Assistant Commissioner Steve Apter said
Checks confirmed the building was not in danger of collapsing, London Fire Brigade added.
Pictures from the sceneResidents raised fire risk fearsThe questions facing investigators'Baby thrown from window'
Survivors of the fire told how they defied official advice to stay put, and ran with their families down dark, smoke-filled corridors to get out of the building.
Michael Paramasivan, who lives on the seventh floor with his girlfriend and young daughter, said: "If we had stayed in that flat, we would've perished."
Others were concerned that the smoke alarms did not go off.
Zoe, from the fourth floor, said: "The way the fire spread so quickly from the fourth floor, all the way up to the 23rd floor was scary."
People in the street below described watching as a baby was thrown from a window, people jumped and climbed down the side of the burning tower using ropes made from bed sheets.
Jody Martin said: "I watched one person falling out, I watched another woman holding her baby out the window... hearing screams.
"I was yelling at everyone to get down and they were saying 'We can't leave our apartments, the smoke is too bad on the corridors'."
Labour demands answers over Grenfell Tower fire tragedy'I saw people jumping out of windows'Evening Standard photographer describes 'war zone' conditionsImage copyrightREUTERSImage captionVolunteers helped unload food deliveries near the tower blockImage copyrightEPAImage captionIt is understood that 'several hundred' people would have been in the block when the fire broke out
Grenfell Tower, North Kensington
127 flats
24 storeys
20 residential levels
4 mixed levels of community areas and residential flats
Call for answers
The prime minister has promised a "proper investigation" into the fire.
But Labour politicians are calling for answers from the government. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said: "We need to know what reports were available, what information was given and what actions were taken."
A review of building regulations covering fire safety was promised by Prime Minister Theresa May's chief of staff, Gavin Barwell, last year, when he was a government minister, but has not been published.
Responding to earlier reports, the Department for Communities and Local Government said it was "simply not true" that a report has been "sat on".
Following the Lakanal House fire in south London in 2009, in which six people died, the coroner recommended the guidance relating to fire safety within the Building Regulations was simplified.
The government said this work was "ongoing".
The government also wrote to councils encouraging them to consider retro-fitting sprinklers, as recommended by the coroner, a statement said.
Southwark Council was fined £270,000 for breaching fire safety regulations after the Lakanal House blaze.
Source: BBC News