All Features articles – Page 433

  • Where are we now?
    Features

    Where are we now?

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    It’s been a year since London got the job of hosting the 2012 Olympics, and to the untrained eye, nothing much seems to have happened. Mark Leftly commentates on what’s been going on, and what’s planned for the next six years and three weeks

  • Surface to Air partners Pascale Scheurer and Holly Porter enjoy the garden party with Max de Rosée (standing),
    Features

    Life can be a picnic …

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    … if you set up your own architectural practice. But it’s not all brainstorming in the back garden, flexible hours and creative control. Emily Wright asked five young architects how to go it alone.

  • The new Wembley Park underground station, complete with creamy, acid-etched Belgian cladding
    Features

    How we work together

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    Or how an architect found its ideal supplier … This week Sonia Soltani tells the tale of Pascall + Watson and Belgian concrete firm Decomo

  • Visitors to the Central Middlesex Hospital are welcomed by a radiant and spacious atrium with a prominent reception desk and malls leading off in four directions.
    Features

    Getting well sooner

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    West London’s BECAD hospital takes traditional healthcare and repackages it into one seamless facility that offers more patients better services for a fraction of the usual effort, space and cost … Martin Spring explains how it was done

  • Features

    What to remember: facades

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    Facades have got so intelligent these days, they can control your building’s airflow, heat transfer, lighting and acoustics. Barbour and Scott Brownrigg explore the options for specifiers

  • Features

    Costs: Curtain wallings

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    Curtain walling looks simple, but it’s a complex network of systems and components. Peter Mayer of ǿմý LifePlans examines the whole-life costs and performance of all of them

  • Mark Clare
    Features

    The gasman cometh …

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    Mark Clare, formerly of British Gas, is set to put Barratt on the acquisition trail

  • Mesh gets image-conscious
    Features

    What to specify: cladding and curtain walling

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    From banks to cinemas, and from theatres to homes, the latest cladding and curtain walling products can work wonders anywhere

  • 99% campaign
    Features

    A typical guzzling, leaking, seeping, spewing british home

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    To highlight the energy inefficiency at the heart of the UK’s existing housing stock, Thomas Lane took energy consultant Cathy Hough to inspect a typical south London terraced house, built 100 years before the latest revision to Part L. It wasn’t pretty …

  • An extraordinary “endless bridge” cantilevers out 54 m towards the Mississippi river
    Features

    A view from the endless bridge

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    Jean Nouvel’s Minneapolis theatre makes a home for drama in a bleak Midwestern landscape

  • Stephen Gee
    Features

    New boss at John Rowan

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    SME focus - Consultant raises profit 22% but managing partner is cautious about future growth

  • Features

    Lets be more Belgian

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    A study of the construction industries of 13 European countries places the UK near the bottom of the efficiency league. Bernard Williams explains why and offers some solutions

  • Features

    Appointments

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    Climbing the career ladder this week …

  • Features

    Lead times April-June 2006

    2006-07-07T00:00:00Z

    In the latest quarterly look at works packages, Paul Dalton of Mace reports that there has been minimal movement in the sector – with one or two notable exceptions … Further on, David Jourdan of Gardiner & Theobald throws the spotlight on the metal of the moment – copper

  • 999% Campaign logo
    Features

    Support the 99% campaign

    2006-07-06T09:07:00Z

    Register your support for ǿմý's important campaign on improving the energy efficiency of our existing building stock

  • A model showing how Sheffield University’s Learning Resource Centre will look when finished
    Features

    Touching the void

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    If you thought concrete had to be heavy then you've clearly never used the latest void forming systems, reports Roger Northam of Cobiax Technologies

  • Suffolk’s Sizewell B
    Features

    Sizewell stories

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    We can also learn a lot from the last reactor built in Britain, Suffolk's Sizewell B. Here, key members of the project team share their memories with Graham Ridout

  • Features

    Solid as a rock

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    An unfortunate side effect of the increasing use of lighter, longer floor spans is vibration, a particular problem in buidings such as hospitals. But as The Concrete Centre’s Andrew Minson reports, this doesn’t have to be a problem

  • Bob Johnston
    Features

    Let's stay together

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Bob Johnston was given the top job at Bovis and told to strengthen the bonds between parent and subsidiary. But that doesn't mean he's there to dispense group hugs. Angela Monaghan found out about his plans to double profits.

  • London Zoo’s Komodo Dragon House boasts a 300 m2 green roof, erected in 2004 by Miller Roofing using Sarnafil products, and based on biodiversity principles developed in Switzerland
    Features

    Sustainability: Green roofs

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Living roofs are often specified for their symbolic value, as a statement of the owner or developer's environmental credentials. But, as Simon Rawlinson of Davis Langdon explains, there are also tangible cost and performance benefits to going green up top