All Letters articles – Page 74

  • Comment

    83 workers, 0 CSCS cards

    2006-05-19T00:00:00Z

    There is nothing new in anything Suzannah Nichol says about the ease of obtaining CSCS cards (21 April, page 46).

  • Comment

    Unproductive students

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    You ran a good article on poor pay and conditions for architecture students (10 March, page 22). It is not that long ago that I was a recently qualified student and I now find myself being approached by dozens of them looking for work. Frankly - and this is not ...

  • Comment

    … and neither will learn

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    It had to take four valuable pages of ڶ to produce predictably stereotyped, polarised views. Although Bennetts and Harding were very civil to each other (Harding uncharacteristically so), the arguments of one were not going to budge the other one jot. Which is a pity.

  • The sign says “No hard hat, no safety boots – no work”.
    Comment

    It's ok. He's holding on to a tile.

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Thanks to Peter Smith of Raymond Smith Patrnership in Eastbourne for this week's example of man's indifference to mortality.

  • Comment

    Football folly

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Women represent a significant labour force, yet have always been underrepresented in the UK construction industry. Patricia Hewitt, when minister for trade and industry, claimed that there are women who want to work in construction but are discouraged by its macho, male-dominated image.

  • Can you identify this building to win a £25 drinks voucher?
    Comment

    In the detail

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Can you identify this building to win a £25 drinks voucher?

  • Comment

    How to get a break

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    The guidance on tax breaks for cleaning up contaminated land and buildings provided by Davis Langdon Crosher and James in the infrastructure cost model (28 April, page 65) contained a couple of misleading statements that I would like to correct.

  • Comment

    They're both wrong …

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Fascinating though it certainly is to read yet another article on how best to manage construction projects from such seasoned professionals as Colin Harding and Rab Bennetts (21 April, page 60), I am left wondering who really will be in charge when, sooner or later, something goes wrong.

  • Comment

    After the battle

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Some readers may remember me as ڶ's planning correspondent. I have since swapped the pen for the mace as mayor elect of Wallingford, Oxfordshire. When I was first elected mayor four years ago, I supported the new Waitrose store featured in "The Battle of Waitrose" (13 April, page 54). It ...

  • Foster’s is the one on the left, apparently
    Comment

    Twin towers

    2006-05-05T00:00:00Z

    Did anyone else do a double-take at the towers featured in the 17 March issue?

  • Comment

    The last word

    2006-05-05T00:00:00Z

    I was very disappointed that the contents page in Friday's magazine (21 April, page 4) styled me as a "professional architect hater". It is patently obvious from the debate with Rab Bennetts that I am not.

  • My wife and I were in Tallinn, Estonia, last summer when we saw these three lads re-roofing a building in the old town – soft hats and soft brains, and the rain was pouring down.
    Comment

    It's raining men

    2006-05-05T00:00:00Z

    My wife and I were in Tallinn, Estonia, last summer when we saw these three lads re-roofing a building in the old town - soft hats and soft brains, and the rain was pouring down.

  • Comment

    The rules of engagement

    2006-05-05T00:00:00Z

    In "The limits of trust" (7 April, page 70), Gillian Birkby stresses the need for two things in contracts for the procurement of designers' services. The first is "some way of identifying exactly what services the designer is to provide", and the second is a mechanism for identifying who is ...

  • Comment

    The view from The Edge

    2006-05-05T00:00:00Z

    If sustainability is on the National Curriculum, isn't it about time it became a central tenet of the government's schoolbuilding programmes?

  • Comment

    Taking issue with Rab Bennetts

    2006-05-05T00:00:00Z

    I must congratulate you on the publication of the debate between Colin Harding and Rab Bennetts. I wish to raise one issue and make one objection.

  • Comment

    Some scandal

    2006-04-28T00:00:00Z

    In response to Colin Harding's assertion that expecting taxpayers to subsidise the public sector's "pension extravagance" is a "scandal" (7 April, page 37), can I check that this pension extravagance would be the average pension paid to public sector workers of about £3500 a year (probably just enough to ...

  • Comment

    A question of recyclability

    2006-04-28T00:00:00Z

    I refer to the article on recycled content (31 March, page 71). While applauding initiatives to improve resource efficiency within construction, the steel construction sector has concerns that the "single issue" focus of setting minimum recycled content targets has the potential to throw up spurious decisions that may in fact ...

  • Comment

    Wey off the mark

    2006-04-28T00:00:00Z

    I was surprised to read your article headed "Key scheme a year late as Weymouth prepares for 2012" (7 April, page 22), which I feel contained several inaccuracies, in particular the suggestion that the scheme is running late.

  • Can you identify this building to win a £25 drinks voucher?
    Comment

    In the detail

    2006-04-28T00:00:00Z

    Can you identify this building to win a £25 drinks voucher?

  • Comment

    Private concerns

    2006-04-28T00:00:00Z

    As the newly appointed chairman of the Association of Consultant Approved Inspectors (which represents about 30% of the building control industry), I would like to endorse the five manifesto proposals, particularly the first two. It is noted however, that the private sector building control was not included in the summit, ...