This week we get into a swordfight with the ODA, a bunfight with Nigella Lawson and a turf war in the West Country before getting ourselves mixed up in some kind of Russian espionage mission

The visitor from the East

Word reaches me of a clandestine Russian investor who is prowling around London sniffing out opportunities in the construction and property world. There are numerous questions that our eagle-eyed consultants are keen to ask the mystery shopper, such as 鈥淲ho are your backers?鈥 and 鈥淗ow many oilfields did you say you owned?鈥 However, I suspect that top of the list after last week鈥檚 round of Champions League football action will be, 鈥淎ny tickets for Moscow?鈥 Somehow, I sense that Chelsea fans might just have the advantage over their Manchester United counterparts on this one.

The meaning of happiness

Finger-sucking culinary diva Nigella Lawson opened London鈥檚 first Maggie鈥檚 cancer care centre last week and soon felt right at home as tea and cake were served for all. But Nigella was having none of it when the chocolate sponge only got as far as the centre鈥檚 architect Richard Rogers. 鈥淪orry, I have to do this,鈥 she said as she grabbed a fork, launched herself across the table and swiped a large chuck of the architect鈥檚 gateau. 鈥淢mmmm,鈥 she moaned, sinking back into her seat, eyes closed, as she devoured the morsel, 鈥済ood cake.鈥 Good to know her TV show is true to real life.

Slashing costs

Slashing costs

The Olympic Delivery Authority has confirmed it will not now be building an 8,000-seat fencing hall, despite having already run a design competition for it. Instead, it will let Olympic swordspeople compete in the Excel Centre in Docklands. According to John Armitt, the ODA鈥檚 chairman, this move has saved the grand sum of 拢70m. It is entirely coincidental, of course, that the discrepancy between the ODA鈥檚 desired cost during negotiations for the aquatics centre (拢170m, as reported in 黑洞社区) and the actual cost agreed with Balfour Beatty (拢242m for the centre itself) is almost exactly the same figure.



I accuse鈥yself

One director has particular reason to be embarrassed by the Office of Fair Trading鈥檚 investigation into the industry鈥檚 bad habits. According to that distinguished journal of record Private Eye, Lord Blackwell, chairman of implicated services provider Interserve, also acts as a non-executive director of 鈥 well, the OFT, actually. And Blackwell is not the only OFT board member with ties to the industry 鈥 Wilson Bowden non-exec Alan Giles is also on the 12-strong board. Just as well that firm isn鈥檛 on the list of 112, then.

We wish you a merry Easter

Bristolians have been forced to live with the soulless concrete muggers鈥 paradise known as the Broadmead shopping centre for a couple of generations now. But not for much longer. After two-and-a-half years Sir Robert McAlpine鈥檚 replacement will open in time for the crucial Christmas shopping season. Or will it? Rumour has it that a load of cladding recently had to be taken away because of a mix-up with the building regs and the deadline is generally said to be 鈥渧ery tight鈥. You can bet the developer is praying that Santa Claus really is coming to town this year.

Doing business with the Taffia

The Welsh construction market is famous for favouring its native contractors. One source at a Bristol firm recently told me he only crosses the Severn 鈥渂y invitation鈥 of the client, so pointless is it otherwise to table a bid without a Welsh address. I asked him why more English contractors didn鈥檛 simply rent a front office in Cardiff? How naive of me. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l soon find out if you try that on,鈥 he told me. You have been warned.

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