Things naturally fall apart, but that doesn’t mean you can’t have fun sticking them back together, as we demonstrate in many different ways this week, from dips in the briney to wooden hats
Get out of my Facebook
Mace has found that the biggest obstacle to productivity is not stroppy clients or bolshie subbies, but the modern scourge that is Facebook. The firm’s younger members are so addicted to the networking site that management has banned its use during working hours. Fuming Mace youngsters can take inspiration from law firm Allen & Overy, whose employees overturned their bosses’ ban on the grounds that Facebook was a professional networking tool. As a user myself, I couldn’t disagree!
Oi, Tony! Over here, son
As we know from that appearance on the Back to the Floor series, Tony Pidgley won’t turn his nose up at a bit of graft, even though the 59 year old is worth more than £100m.
He arrived 90 minutes early for the launch of the Superdensity report last Wednesday morning and, upon discovering that all the chairs for the audience hadn’t been set out, he decided to get stuck in and carry over the last 10 himself …
Digby’s party favours
Building columnist Sir Digby Jones – now styled Lord Jones of Birmingham after his simultaneous elevation to the government and the peerage – has revealed that he met Conservative leader David Cameron to ask him to back a bid to become mayor of London. Cameron said he would, but only if Digby joined the Tories. Jones
said he would never join a political party, and that was that. Clearly, that hasn’t stopped him getting a job with one … in fact, I hear that ministers have coined a nickname for their outspoken co-worker – Comrade Digby.
By their hats shall ye know them
Architects come up with some strange ways to sell their concepts to clients, but Bennetts Associates might have capped them all. When the firm started up 20 years ago, it had difficulties persuading its first big client to put curved roofs on its building. After weeks of making models, the weary negotiating team came to a meeting wearing rejected models on their heads. It worked, and the curved roofs were adopted. Expect to see Zaha Hadid in an aquatic headpiece any day now.
Back to basics
Looks like the Tories may be reverting to type on the housing front. Michael Gove called for a relaxation of the party’s anti-greenfield development line. But that may change now he’s been replaced by Grant Shapps, whose website proudly trumpets his opposition to the 10,000 homes that the government wants to see built in his Welwyn and Hatfield constituency.
The big dippers
I hear that engineers at Whitbybird are taking extreme measures to fund a project that they designed. The job is a simple library in Waterloo, for which seven staff members will shortly try to raise £25,000 by swimming the English channel. If only all engineers were so dedicated to their projects. Of course, there’s a good reason they’re going to all that trouble – the building is destined for Waterloo in Sierra Leone. If you’d like to sponsor them, call Paul Steen on 020-7631 5291.
Postscript
If you have any industry stories to tell us, or photographs you’d like to share, please write to: The editor, Building, 8th floor, Ludgate House, 245 Blackfriars Road, London SE1 9UY. Fax 020-7560 4004 Email hansom@cmpi.biz
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