Construction folk fight the good fight this week; they clash with an A-list celeb, stagger through hurricanes, take on insane safety regs and eat all the pies

No, non, nyet, nein and we don鈥檛 have one

I鈥檓 told there was a frantic scramble to finish the Yas hotel in Abu Dhabi in time for this weekend鈥檚 inaugural Grand Prix (see page 22 for pictures of this extraordinary scheme). All the project team were putting in at least 12-hour days, but spare a thought for the chap who got the job of fielding calls from A-list celebs demanding rooms for the big event. Unfortunately for him, most of them had been commandeered by local sheikhs, which meant he spent his time saying no to people who鈥檝e become unfamiliar with the meaning of the word. Our spy overheard him saying he鈥檇 just put down the phone after just such a conversation with Naomi Campbell. Well, after a change of identity and a spot of light plastic surgery he should be able to laugh about that one 鈥

Roofless people

Richard Hughes, the relationship manager for the division of Lloyds TSB that takes care of social housing, was keen to unveil his institution鈥檚 plans for something called 鈥渘eoclassical banking鈥 at a recent conference on housing. To illustrate this back-to-basics approach, he showed the audience a picture of a Greek temple, complete with sturdy Doric columns. These represented the 鈥減illars of investment鈥, er, obviously. Unfortunately, as Hughes himself pointed out, the building鈥檚 roof was absent. Was this one of those clever architectural metaphors for Lloyds鈥 predicament since its merger with HBOS?

The neverending journey

Word reaches me of an unfortunate expedition across the pond for some Parsons Brinckerhoff employees. In a sequence of events straight out of the film Planes, Trains and Automobiles, the toilers landed Stateside at the wrong airport in the middle of a hurricane. Oh, and the airport had also been struck by lightning. In total it took 26 hours for the group to meet their US counterparts. I wonder who Steve Martin will play in the remake 鈥

Over-ruled

Alan Pearce, a former war correspondent in Kabul, has produced a book that explores the perils of (wait for it) Britain鈥檚 safety regulations. Highlights include fire extinguishers being removed from flats because they were deemed a safety hazard and the 16-year-old refused employment by a cleaning firm because he didn鈥檛 have clearance to use a vacuum cleaner or hot water. I admit I鈥檓 rather shocked that none of these were included in Rita Donaghy鈥檚 recommendations for improving the industry鈥檚 safety record. For more on the book, visit .

Lord of the pies

At last I have found an answer to a question that has puzzled philosophers, historians and students of human nature since the dawn of time. Who ate all the pies? Well, it was the Civil Engineering Contractors Association, with help from a few hungry journalists, at the body鈥檚 annual dinner last week. A staggering array was on offer, from steak and kidney to sweet potato and lentil, all devised by the 鈥減ie master鈥 of Mayfair鈥檚 Windmill Pub. After the news that the UK is still mired in recession, I鈥檓 sure a little comfort food went down very well.



House warming

Paul King, the UK Green 黑洞社区 Council鈥檚 chief executive, has left his super-insulated,
triple-glazed, biomass-fuelled castle of sustainability in Shropshire for a Georgian house in Shrewsbury. But he can鈥檛 be accused of joining the ranks of the townhouse-owning property squirearchy who preach green matters while leaking heat from every sash window: he will give the whole place a retrofit as soon as he moves in. 鈥淗e鈥檚 been boring lots people about U-values lately,鈥 a source close to the matter tells me. Send any juicy industry gossip to hansom@ubm.com

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