All Interviews articles – Page 21

  • /v/v/k/building041.jpg
    Features

    Back for seconds: David Nurser

    2010-09-17T00:00:00Z

    David Nurser has a voracious appetite for risk-taking. First he set up the surveying firm CNP in a recession. And now he’s a year into his second venture, Paragon (more great timing)

  • Toby Young
    Comment

    Freedom fighter: Toby Young interview

    2010-09-10T00:00:00Z

    Author Toby Young is one of the first parents to try to found a free school - partly, it seems, in an effort to alienate as many architects as possible. Emily Wright asked him why

  • Left to right: David Leventhal, Lee Polisano and Ron Bakker consider the possibility that it will rain later …
    Comment

    PLP: So business is looking up?

    2010-09-03T00:00:00Z

    Remember the Polisano crew who busted out of Kohn Pedersen Fox and started up on their own? That must have been a year ago now. Emily Wright found out what happened to them next

  • Wingrove
    Comment

    BT's Gary Wingrove: Your call is important to us

    2010-08-06T00:00:00Z

    Gary Wingrove is responsible for helping cut BT’s £900m-a-year property spending habit. And to do it, he’s moving away from its frameworks. So who is he looking to talk to, asks Emily Wright, and what does he want to hear?

  • Ian Tyler
    Features

    Ian Tyler: Life moves on

    2010-07-30T00:00:00Z

    It’s not that Balfour Beatty is taking the recession in its stride exactly, but when the contractor ranked No 1 in the ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø Top 150 greets deep government cuts with equanimity, you know it must be doing something right. Emily Wright asks chief executive Ian Tyler what it is

  • Graham Shennan
    Features

    Graham Shennan on Morgan Sindall's merger

    2010-07-23T00:00:00Z

    It’s been a month since Morgan Sindall’s building and civils arms became one, and MD Graham Shennan is still explaining that it’s all part of a planned bid for market share. Is Joey Gardiner persuaded?

  • Diane Johnson
    Features

    Electrical Contractors Association: Precedent Johnson

    2010-06-25T00:00:00Z

    Diane Johnson is the ECA’s first woman president.What’s she got planned for her year at the helm?

  • Nigel Keen
    Features

    Waitrose’s Nigel Keen: ‘The next 10 years will be fun’

    2010-06-16T12:53:00Z

    Few people expected Waitrose to do well out of the recession. But profit is up 25%, it’s building 10 supermarkets a year, and now has plans to take on the convenience store market. No wonder property boss Nigel Keen is feeling so chipper

  • Andrew Chisholm
    Features

    Andrew Chisholm: Career break and back

    2010-06-04T00:00:00Z

    One year ago, Andrew Chisholm shut the surveying firm he had spent 15 years building up, then took a seven-month break. But now he’s back with a new company – and a lot of his old staff

  • Henry Trickey
    Features

    I'm lovin' it: Henry Trickey of McDonald

    2010-05-14T00:00:00Z

    Companies eager to expand in these famished times won’t be able to resist McDonald’s’ supersize diet of drive-thru restaurants and store makeovers. Emily Wright chews the fat with Henry Trickey, the man who’s serving them up

  • Steven Holl
    Features

    Steven Holl: After Mackintosh

    2010-05-07T00:00:00Z

    For most people in the UK, Steven Holl is the best architect they’ve never heard of. Now he’s tackling the world-famous Glasgow School of Art, that’s about to change

  • Keith Whitmore, Westfield
    Features

    Keith Whitmore: ‘I do not suffer fools gladly’

    2010-04-30T00:00:00Z

    Working for Westfield’s head of design Keith Whitmore may seem a little intimidating at first. But once you’ve got used to his ferociously demanding standards and early morning phone calls, he’s really very approachable

  • Features

    BDP's Peter Drummond: The revolutionary in carpet slippers

    2010-04-23T00:00:00Z

    BDP, Britain’s biggest architect, is better known for quiet competence than daring. But this is the firm that defied Tesco, beat the downturn, expanded into India and Libya and doesn’t give a fig for profit. Chief executive Peter Drummond tells Roxane McMeeken all about it

  • Dynasty: Alan Cherry, centre, with Graham to his left in 1985. Also pictured are Trisha Gupta, design director and Mike Pearce, financial director
    Features

    Running Countryside: Another bite of the Cherry

    2010-04-16T00:00:00Z

    Two days after Countryside chairman Alan Cherry died, his sons were back at work. Graham, the housebuilder’s chief executive, talks to Joey Gardiner about the values his father instilled in him – and whether the company will be able to hang on to its vision in less certain times

  • Features

    Peter Morrison: RMJM’s business model

    2010-04-09T00:00:00Z

    Peter Morrison, chief executive of Scotland’s best known architect, explains his hiring policies (which include Sir Fred Goodwin), and how RMJM turned itself into an international success story

  • Features

    Gene Kohn: Sorting out the mess at Kohn Pedersen Fox UK

    2010-04-01T00:00:00Z

    When the London office of Kohn Pedersen Fox was split in two by the departure of Lee Polisano in September, founding partner Gene Kohn did what any self-respecting 79 year old would – he moved from New York to London to sort the whole mess out himself. He tells Emily ...

  • Features

    Fast build nation: Richard Ogden on offsite construction

    2010-03-26T00:00:00Z

    Richard Ogden, the man who built a McDonald’s in two days, thinks the speed, efficiency and sustainability of offsite manufacture, and investment from major contractors such as Laing O’Rourke, will at last win over a sceptical industry

  • Features

    Alsop’s new look: Chris Littlemore interview

    2010-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Chris Littlemore, the boss of Archial, is planning to exploit the architectural group’s most famous brand for its relaunched international business

  • Features

    Go figure: The future of infrastructure spending

    2010-03-12T00:00:00Z

    Treasury secretary Ian Pearson gives Joey Gardiner a lesson in abstract mathematics

  • Steve Morgan
    Features

    Me and my baby: Steve Morgan is back at Redrow

    2010-03-05T00:00:00Z

    You can’t imagine much intimidates Steve Morgan. In his time, the 57-year-old former site engineer has battled the prime minister of Thailand for control of Liverpool football club, founded Redrow at the age of 21 with a £5,000 loan from his father and was on the wrong end of a ...