This week's movers
Howland rejoins F+A
Andrew Howland has rejoined Franklin + Andrews as principal QS within the commercial property team. Howland recently returned from a stint in Bermuda working on a variety of commercial and education projects. He is based in London but is involved in proposed arena and velodrome projects in Glasgow and a new leisure centre in Harlow.
F+A's commercial property team is working on Southwark Council's regeneration programme, which it says is the largest scheme of its type in London.
Museum appointment
Capita Symonds has appointed Eric Gordon as associate director to oversee the cost management of the £50m refurbishment of Glasgow's Museum of Transport. The firm is project manager and planning supervisor on the project.
Gordon, who is a graduate of the Glasgow College of Building, will boost core cost management skills at Capita Symonds' Scottish team.
PM expert promoted
Faithful+Gould has promoted Paul Davies to director in the Bristol branch. He has a remit to grow project management nationally while continuing in his former post as head of PM for the firm in the Southwest and south Wales. He joined F+G in 2002, following an earlier career on the client side with property developers BAA Lynton and Gazeley Properties. During this period he was involved in project managing schemes including Heathrow Airport's Terminal 3, Riverside's mixed use regeneration scheme in Norwich and Delta Park, Enfield.
Sweett snaps up Kelso
Cyril Sweett has appointed Fiona Kelso as a consultant within the firm's sustainability department. Kelso was formerly an environmental analyst with RMJM Architects.
She will report to Isabel McAllister, associate director of sustainability. McAllister said in the coming months Cyril Sweett aimed to take on two further sustainability recruits who would "ideally be QSs".
The sustainability department is working on such projects as the development of a toolkit to help contractors use more recycled materials for WRAP (the government's Waste & Resources Action Programme). The Recycled Content Toolkit was launched last month.
Source
QS News
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