More Focus – Page 569
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Construction's devolution wishlist
The UK is on the brink of one of the most important constitutional reforms this century. What might the benefits be for the industry?
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Spot the difference?
There is some confusion over their exact powers, but with £800m a year, the eight new regional development agencies could change the face of regeneration in England.
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Student demo
The University of East London's new campus is the Egan demonstration project everyone is watching. With six months to go, the race is on to prove that its innovations work.
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There's the hub
Gleeds' new web service, PhotoHub, significantly enhances the client's ability to get the building it bargained for.
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Whipping our behinds
Contrary to common sense, the shorter the time to complete a project, the more likely it is that the team will get it done in time. This suggests some ways to organise every job
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Fire fighters
Lawyer Ian Hunter explains how the Employment Relations Bill will help workers who feel they have been unfairly dismissed.
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Appointments
Contractors Andrew Rowe has been appointed commercial manager in Swallow Construction s new Northampton office. Gary Davies joins the office as project manager and Andrew Wright has become senior estimator. Bowmer & Kirkland has promoted Graham Rodgers to quantity surveying director for the central region. Richardson ...
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IT: Design software Model behaviour
Why is Amec modelling the building design process with the software that NASA uses to engineer spacecraft? To prioritise design tasks, and to get team members working together.
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Contractors should be more like us
Hanson chief Andrew Dougal says contractors could learn a lot from materials firms. So, where are they going wrong?
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Some kind of refuge
Some of the fortunate who escaped the carnage of Kosovo are working on sites across London. But, being paid £2.50 an hour, many are being exploited. All names have been changed.
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Wet and wild
Who says QSs are boring? David Weight may be a 50-year-old cost data manager, but he is also a champion surfer who spends every spare moment riding the waves
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The roaring twenties
1999's Hays Montrose/¾«¶«Ó°ÊÓ consultants salary guide suggests that if you're young and gifted, the chances are you're also getting richer in a hurry. Engineers and architectural technologists are included for the first time.
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Art for art's sake
Architect John McAslan & Partners has given publisher Thames & Hudson a modern office interior that is as elegant and attractive as one of its art books.
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Blue heaven
Bluewater may be the last of the mammoth out-of-town shopping centres, but its classy interiors set new standards for smaller, town-centre malls across the UK.
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Secret services
How did architect Hawkins/Brown and services engineer Atelier Ten install cabling and ducting in a listed Victorian manor house without ruining its character?
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How to do adjudication
Two books on the Construction Act. Both helpful and well researched. But whereas the first gets an unconditional thumbs-up, the second has been partly overtaken by events.
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Don't ignore the formalities
Failure to stick to the precise procedural requirements of termination clauses in commercial contracts can have dire legal consequences. What can you do to reduce the risk ?
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Timely reminder
A recent decision on the Working Time Regulations 1998 confirms employees' right to do no more than a 48-hour week, unless they opt out.
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Tender price forecast
As the Far Eastern economic crisis recedes, the outlook for construction does not look as bleak as it did six months ago. Tender prices also likely to creep up, pushed by rises in wages, materials prices and workload.
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Just the job
Try Construction's hard-working commercial director tells Jane Garwood about his ambitious plans to improve the business and his motorbike.