There鈥檚 old news 鈥� and then there鈥檚 very, very old news
Keep up to speed with old news
One of my hacks was a bit miffed this month when a press release from the Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) on an upcoming government green scheme turned out not to contain a single shred of new information. The 鈥渁nnouncement鈥�, as it was described, reminded him of when disgraced New Labour spin doctor Jo Moore emailed the transport department鈥檚 press office on the day of the 9/11 attacks saying it was a 鈥済ood day to bury bad news鈥�. Maybe BEIS, as the 20th anniversary of the attack approached, saw it as a good day to publish old news. How times have changed.
Smartening up security
A visit to Wates鈥檚 Lucent scheme at Piccadilly Circus saw one of my team greeted at the site entrance by a man sporting a bow tie. Turns out the chap in question is called Abdul, who originally hails from Afghanistan 鈥� which has been in the news recently. On the day of my hack鈥檚 visit, Abdul was wearing a gold bow tie but he tells my scribe that it鈥檚 a different colour for every day. He certainly beats some of the more surly security types I鈥檝e had the misfortune of bumping into.
Wates uses Shaftesbury Avenue as its loading and unloading access road. It all seems to be working well but the road is on a designated route that would be handed over to security types if anything happened to the Queen
Long live our noble Queen
Sticking with Lucent, which translates as glowing with or giving off light, Wates uses Shaftesbury Avenue as its loading and unloading access road. It all seems to be working well but for some there is a nagging worry at the back of their minds. Apparently, the road is on a designated route that would be handed over to security types if anything happened to the Queen 鈥� so forcing Wates to find another loading area. HRH will be 97 when Wates is scheduled to complete the job at the end of 2023 so one suspects some at the firm will be keeping fingers and toes crossed 鈥�
Greens are good for you
Alex Salmond has started another row with his former party, the SNP. Salmond, who was Scotland鈥檚 first minister for seven years until 2014, reckons last month鈥檚 co-operation agreement between the SNP and the Scottish Greens, giving the grouping a majority in the Scottish parliament, is 鈥渟tudent politics masquerading as coalition building鈥�. He added: 鈥淚f I had placed government in the hands of the Green Party, there would currently be no Forth Crossing and no Aberdeen Western Peripheral Road.鈥� Given Galliford Try lost millions on the former and Galliford Try, again, along with Balfour Beatty, lost millions more on Aberdeen, perhaps there鈥檚 two firms right there who wished the Greens had got in.
Crumbs!
A highly entertaining chat with British Land head of development Nigel Webb saw one of my hacks learn that the developer had held a cake-making competition some years ago. Nothing remarkable in that, I guess, but among the usual entries was one modelled on 5 Broadgate, better known as the UBS building. I鈥檓 told it was especially impressive. Original Broadgate developer Sir Stuart Lipton is not a fan so perhaps it was a good job he wasn鈥檛 brought in to judge.
Cheese topping
British Land was, of course, the developer on the Cheesegrater, and over the summer one of my team got the chance to go there while it was quiet and have a nose around. And very good it was too 鈥� though of course all was closely supervised. I鈥檓 told the building is a magnet for people considerably younger than me who try to get in so they can take pictures of themselves at the top. Presumably they do that at night, my scribe enquired. No, no, quite the reverse, came the reply. The youngsters walk in during the day and pretend they鈥檝e got a meeting there. Apparently, they just try to bluff their way through. They should put that to good use and become journalists instead.
Same old news
One reader recently sent in this crumpled-up newspaper clipping found stuffed into a wall cavity during some recent bathroom renovation. It鈥檚 lasted well, given it鈥檚 from March 1963. That鈥檚 not the only thing that鈥檚 lasted well. The headline about output seems very current too.
Send any juicy industry gossip to Mr Joseph Aloysius Hansom, who founded 精东影视 in 1843, at hansom@building.co.uk
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