More Focus – Page 356
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Features
The how what why
Martin Goss answers the key questions about certification, regulation and standardisation
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So who’s counting?
The cost-benefit argument for OSC appears to have gone largely unmade.
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‘We went from greenfield to selling hamburgers in 48 hours’
In the 1980s Richard Ogden played a key role in trailblazing the use of off-site construction for a certain fast-food chain. Now he’s the first chairman of Buildoffsite, connecting burgeoning demand for new construction techniques with supply.
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Bring it on
Okay, we can all stop worrying about whether off-site techniques will ever be taken seriously as a construction method, or whether anybody outside housebuilding has even heard of it... The real question now is whether the industry is ready to take advantage of all those off-site opportunities – the Olympics, ...
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Costs: Structural steel
If structural steel is your frame of choice, you need to think about fire protection. Peter Mayer of ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø LifePlans runs through the various options and what each one will cost
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Structures
Our structural special kicks off by examining the new thinking on tall buildings in the post-9/11 world, before offering tips on fine-tuning dealings with structural engineers and how to gauge costs of fire-protecting steel frames
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Alun Michael
Once upon a time, the government saw construction as a vital lever for regulating the economy, and gave it an entire minister. These says it gets an average of seven minutes of Alun Michael’s day. So what can he accomplish in that time?
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Top 200 Consultants 2005: Class acts
It’s Friday night and that means it’s time for … erm, ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø’s eagerly awaited annual consultants’ league. Before we count down the top 200, Katie Puckett and Richard Heap pick out the highest climbers, hottest new entries, bestselling acts – and a rather familiar group in the number one spot ...
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The blame game
As soon as Mowlem’s accounting difficulties hit the news last month the race was on to find the person responsible. ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø reports on the unseemly row between the past three chief executives over their financial problems and the impact they have had on the company …
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ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø intelligence Q2 2005: Ups and downs
Construction was a mixed bag in the second quarter of this year, reports Experian Business Strategies, as new work orders went up 12%, output dropped 13%, London’s R&M output declined and everywhere else’s increased …
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Driving force
Five thousand workers lost their jobs in the tragic, well-publicised closure of MG Rover’s Longbridge factory. Now, there is a scheme to retrain them that could also help ease the construction industry’s skills crisis. A brilliant solution – so why won’t more firms jump on the bandwagon?
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I’ll be seeing you …
Stephen Williams has just been appointed head of construction at the Health and Safety Executive. As ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø discovered, he is a man with an intense interest in the industry – and plans personally to visit as many sites as possible.
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The defeated champions
Tessa Jowell has become the ministerial design champion. ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø asks how she can succeed where so many have failed, while Peter Stewart, assesses if government is now wise to design
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Private sector housebuilder of the year: Winner St James Homes
Cultural values may not be at the top of every private housebuilder’s priorities but they are at St James Homes – which is why it won this award sponsored by Home Service (GB)
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Affordable Housing Provider of the Year: Winner Dominion Housing Group
A high satisfaction rate among tenants is just one indication that Dominion can hold its own against its competitors in the private sector and it well deserved this Fusion ºÚ¶´ÉçÇø Systems-sponsored award