All ǿմý articles in 2005 issue 48 – Page 4
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News
ǿմý writers hit winning streak at industry awards
ǿմý writers won five awards at last week’s International ǿմý Press Journalism Awards ceremony in central London. Mark Leftly, the features editor, scooped the Construction Journalist of the Year award, news editor George Hay took the prize for Feature Writer of the Year, Housing editor Josephine Smit was named ...
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News
Atkins reports profit despite Metronet losses
Support services group Atkins this week revealed a solid set of results for the six months to the end of September, despite a £3m provision on its Metronet investment.
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News
Immigrant workers arrested
Immigration officers this week arrested 12 suspected failed asylum seekers working on a £560m Ministry of Defence construction project, in what is believed to be part of a wider crackdown on illegal workers in the industry.
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Comment
Architects of our downfall
Colin Harding CABE acts for an architectural elite and against the interests of the construction industry in general. The result is an approach to building that you might call Blairist …
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News
Big architects share out East London Line spoils
Wilkinson Eyre, John McAslan + Partners and Scott Brownrigg win contracts on stations and regeneration schemes
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News
By royal appointment
Oxford architect Berman Guedes Stretton has been appointed for a £1.4m lecture theatre at Queen’s College, Oxford University, after winning a limited competition against Rick Mather Architects, MacCormac Jamieson Prichard and van Heyningen & Haward.
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News
ODPM finance director appointed Olympic tsar
Andrew Lean becomes Olympic co-ordinator for the civil service, as ODPM undergoes wide-ranging shake-up
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Comment
The appliance of science
Attending the Sustainability Awards organised by ǿմý last month brought home to me that the age of sustainable buildings has finally arrived.
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Features
Just the job: Gemma Clark in the Antartica
Structural engineer Gemma Clark explains why her winter is going to be even chillier than ours …
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News
Mayor offers to trade affordability for ecology
In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, London mayor prepares to adopt a more flexible approach to housing criteria
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News
Theatre for little adults
The UK’s first purpose-built children’s theatre opens this week behind City Hall on London’s South Bank.
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News
Wembley plumbing contractor goes into administration
The troubled Wembley Stadium project endured another setback this week after its plumbing contractor went into administration.
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News
CABE adds design quality plan to PFI debate
CABE is continuing the PFI debate by recommending a seven-point plan to improve design quality.
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News
CPA demands action on gas price increases
The Construction Products Association this week wrote to trade and industry secretary Alan Johnson warning of the “serious consequences” that rises in gas prices would have on UK materials companies.
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Comment
Send the academics on site
Despite 30 years’ experience in building control, I no longer feel confident on site that what I am looking at achieves the requirements of the regulations; also, when asked for advice I don’t always have the answer straight away because the regulations have become too complicated.
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News
Amec to sell French arm after taking £70m hit
City reacts with scepticism as firm announces plan to sell Spie and split into two separate companies
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News
Barts paying £500k a month in PFI interest
The cost of the UK’s biggest PFI scheme, the £1.1bn Barts and The London NHS Trust, is rising by £500,000 each month because it has not reached financial close.
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News
Amec workers at T5 join call for extra bonuses
Three hundred Amec workers at Heathrow Terminal 5 have added their voices to the demand for extra bonuses.
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News
China hires Atkins to plan 48 cities the size of London
Consultant to work with Chinese government on cities the size of European capitals, each housing up to 6 million
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