All Features articles – Page 427

  • Illustration by Mike Bell
    Features

    The run of the town

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    If you're quick on the draw, management buyouts are your chance to claim some territory, stamp your authority on it, and ride off into the sunset. But it's a dangerous business, and Boot Hill awaits for the unlucky and the unwary.

  • Supporting from the sidelines
    Features

    Running the risk

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Three consultants are lining up to deliver the £5.2bn Olympic construction programme. But victory in this most prestigious of contests comes with potentially massive liability - enough to put many firms off entering the race altogether. Josh Brooks analyses the likely stumbling blocks

  • Abbey Mill House: Morley has agreed the £40m forward-funding of PMB Holdings’ 15-storey tower in Reading. It will be the city’s tallest office building.
    Features

    Put your specs on

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    The speculative office funding market is back, and more players are getting in on the action than ever before. But success will rely on a clear, realistic vision of occupational demand and rental prospects.

  • Building work on Foster and Partners’ Tanaka Business School at Imperial College London was carried out by contractor Exterior after a two-stage tender
    Features

    Procurement: Two-stage tendering

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    In the second of our procurement series, Simon Rawlinson of Davis Langdon takes a look at two-stage tendering and how to get the best out of the early appointment of the contractor

  • Illustration by Brett Ryder
    Features

    What a performance

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    The European energy performance of buildings directive obliges landlords to make clear how much energy their offices use. No guidance has been issued on how to meet the directive, costs seem to be a state secret and no one has a clue if it will work. Oh, and it came ...

  • Manchester’s latest mixed-use tower is the £83m Albany Crown
    Features

    The only way is up

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Dublin and Manchester are expanding at such a rapid pace that many developers believe the only way for them to continue to compete as major European cities is to build tall. So what are the prospects of seeing more high-rise office space? Well, that's two quite different stories …

  • The office unplugged
    Features

    The office unplugged

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Wi-fi hot-spots are popping up in coffee bars from Greenwich to Glasgow, and more and more homes have wireless internet. But what does the technology mean for the office?

  • Richard Kauntze
    Features

    So where next?

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    The British Council for Offices has enjoyed such success it might be forgiven for resting on its laurels. But at a time when most of Britain's wealth is created inside offices, the chance of reaching out to a wider business world is one it must pursue with vigour

  • Gemma Sapiano
    Features

    Just the job: work, rest and more pay

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Gemma Sapiano tells Sonia Soltani about her speedy rise to the role of construction manager

  • The new entrance on Madison Avenue
    Features

    Piano's intermezzos

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    For his New York debut, Renzo Piano has created a grand opening and some sympathetic connecting passages for the Morgan Library & Museum on Madison Avenue

  • Features

    Top tips on… Radio identification

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Bar coding is currently used for tracking and managing the movement of goods, but radio frequency identity tags have the potential to offer much more. These are miniaturised devices that can be implanted into products. They contain information that can be picked up by a proximity reader and transmitted to ...

  • Nokia N93
    Features

    Gadget heaven

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Thomas Lane welcomes you to Techtopia, a world where whole building sites are RFID-tagged, mobiles have more functions than Swiss army knives and Sydney is just a free phone call away …

  • The office of the future
    Features

    The office of the future

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    What will it look like? Who will it cater for? And will the market hold up? We asked a few people who should know to peer into their crystal balls …

  • Foster and Partners’ Bishops Square development in Spitalfields, east London, uses a large number of unitised components.
    Features

    Here's one we prepared earlier …

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    If you are a specialist in residential development or hotels, you'll be well up on the many uses of off-site manufacture. But are there the same opportunities to build off site in the office sector? Simon Rawlinson of QS Davis Langdon discusses the current state of play

  • Don’t know which one to pick?
    Features

    Don't know which one to pick?

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Choosing the right consultants for office projects is never easy, and it's only getting harder as specialisms and Building Regulations multiply. Mark Leftly asked some developers for their expert advice, then got a consultant to outline what not to do…

  • Sir David King
    Features

    Sir David King

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    In the first of three interviews on the future of energy in the UK, the government's chief scientist tells Thomas Lane why we need new homes and new nuclear power stations.

  • Gerald Ronson
    Features

    ‘If you are offering a six-star product, you can't deliver three-star service …'

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    … so says property tycoon Gerald Ronson on his plans for London's first luxury office tower. He talks exclusively to Claer Barrett about his ambition to create a Savoy among offices.

  • Viñoly’s 192 m high ‘Walkie Talkie’ building at Fenchurch Street for Land Securities – an example of couture architecture at its most flamboyant
    Features

    Who you calling Square?

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Forget Milan, forget Paris and don't even mention New York. The big story on the architectural catwalk is the City of London, with Europe's most fashionable architects wowing the Square Mile with glamorous designs. Rob Booth watches them strut their stuff

  • Ireland rugby coach and BCO conference speaker Eddie O’Sullivan is no expert on the UK property market. But he does know all about building a team and turning that team into winners.
    Features

    On the ball

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Ireland rugby coach and BCO conference speaker Eddie O'Sullivan is no expert on the UK property market. But he does know all about building a team and turning that team into winners. George Hay finds out what he can teach you.

  • Jeffery Adams
    Features

    Appointments

    2006-05-12T00:00:00Z

    Who's moving up the career ladder this week?