All articles by Thomas Lane – Page 15
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Features
Sustainability in India: Growing pains
Construction is booming in India, but what chance is there the country can build sustainably?
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Features
Streatham Hub: How to build an ice rink above a swimming pool
Streatham Hub in south London contains not only a supermarket, apartments and a bus station, but a first-floor ice rink above a heated pool
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Comment
Green is gold
Next year’s Ecobuild will be the biggest yet, with an added focus on commercial property
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Features
Siemen's Abu Dhabi HQ
Technology giant Siemens developed one LEED Platinum-rated office in London, and is now trying to replicate this success - in the Abu Dhabi desert
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Features
Passivhaus for dummies
An off-site Passivhaus solution has been developed that can, its maker claims, be put up by anyone able to hold a hammer. Thomas Lane reports
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Features
Leeds Arena: Big noise in the city
How Bam kept the noise down in the 12,500-seat arena in Leeds city centre
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Features
Southend Pier Cultural Centre: Out on a limb
How do you carry out a construction project more than a mile out to sea during one of the wettest, windiest summers on record? Well, Kier’s approach to the £3m Southend Pier Cultural Centre job was to build it somewhere else
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Features
BIM: The inside story one year on
Ðǿմ«Ã½ caught up with the team on the Manchester library refurb project to see if BIM was everything they hoped it would be
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Features
Retrofit reality check
A test to measure heat loss in refurbished homes shows a worrying gulf between predictions for energy efficiency and reality
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News
Fuel cell-powered home on market
Crest Nicholson development offers first home powered by fuel cell, whilst E.ON looks to distribute system
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Features
Housing Design Awards 2012: Quality streets
Our technical editor’s take on the five winning schemes in this year’s Housing Design Awards
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Features
Rope trick: Thames cable car
An ambitious plan to build a cable car over the Thames was up against some seriously tough technical challenges, not to mention the dreaded jinx of the Greenwich peninsula. Ðǿմ«Ã½ finds out whether they pulled it off. Photography by Tim Crocker
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Features
The Mary Rose museum: Hidden treasure
The Mary Rose museum is ready for fit-out but to get to this point the contractor had to build around the ancient hull, keeping it at a constant temperature to allow restoration to be uninterrrupted. Thomas Lane found out how the team handled an historic gem
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Archive Titles
A trip to the top: What is the Orbit like?
Britain’s tallest and most controversial sculpture, the Orbit was unveiled today on the Olympic Park. What is it like?
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Features
Offshore wind farms: Winds of change
Tidal turbine technology is changing fast and offshore wind turbines are getting bigger, so the government-backed firm Narec is investing £80m into its testing facilities to simulate the harsh conditions at sea. Thomas Lane explains
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Features
Housing ventilation: Bit of an air con
In the race to build ever more airtight homes, it appears that housebuilders are sacrificing air quality, with some 95% of new dwellings failing Part F ventilation standards
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News
95% of homes fail to meet ventilation requirements
Rise in airtight homes prompts increase in mechanical systems
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Archive Titles
Kingspan insulation collection scheme: Waste away
Kingspan has piloted an insulation collection scheme in Dudley that aims to help contractors edge closer to their zero-waste-to-landfill targets
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Features
Designing a dancefloor: Ramboll's new moves
When Ramboll was faced with the problem of designing a lightweight, long-span floor capable of withstanding the combined weight of a school dance class, it needed to come up with some exciting new moves … Ðǿմ«Ã½ reports
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Features
France's nuclear fusion reactor: The hottest and coldest place on earth
Ðǿմ«Ã½ goes on the trail of the ITER - a £12.5bn multinational project that might just save the world …