All Features articles – Page 452

  • The Olympic stadium
    Features

    On top of the world

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    Wednesday, 6 July, 12.49: A moment that will leave an indelible mark on the city of London. Against the odds the UK’s capital won the right to host the 2012 Olympics. For bid leader Lord Coe, it was a personal triumph to match his two 1500 m Olympic gold medals ...

  • The Fred Longworth School in Tyldesley, Greater Manchester
    Features

    School project

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    Mitie has just opened its first two construction skills centres for 14-16 year olds

  • 3D trompe d’oeil: Brunel’s SS Great Britain ‘floating’ on 50 mm of water sitting on top of a glass plate is surprisingly successful
    Features

    Hidden shallows

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    As soon as Brunel’s 19th-century SS Great Britain was taken out of the sea, it began to corrode. Now a restoration team has found a way to preserve its hull while also giving it the illusion of a return to the open water.

  • Steel cantilevers off the central spine permit clerestory at the perimeter
    Features

    Designer Power

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    Gus Alexander heads to Portobello Road, Notting Hill, to take a look at a swanky residential scheme that is a testament to the very hands-on approach of its architect

  • Kill or cure?
    Features

    Kill or cure?

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    As fewer and fewer contractors are willing to pay £4m for the chance to win a £100m PFI hospital, the government is being forced to decide between single-bid tenders and increasingly painful delays …

  • A private school in the middle of Kibera, where the parents clubbed together to hire a teacher
    Features

    The bridge to Kibera

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    These Kenyan children may have a school to go to, but without clean water and sanitation they will soon have to leave. They are among 700,000 dwellers in Africa’s biggest slum, and they are desperate for the construction industry’s help. Paul Jowitt explains how it can be given

  • Simon Vivian
    Features

    Simon Vivian begins

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    Most of Simon Vivian’s six months in charge of Mowlem have been spent struggling with disastrous projects, boardroom bloodletting and a predecessor who didn’t leave. Now he’s finally ready to do it his way. Tom Broughton finds out what he has in mind.

  • Richard Munro
    Features

    Appointments

    2005-07-08T00:00:00Z

    Movers this week

  • Russell Stewart, Linsey Stansfield, Rick Gray
    Features

    Talking shop

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Three young and thrusting managers at Bovis Lend Lease chat to Victoria Madine over coffee

  • Labour MP Alison Seabeck, MP Nick Raynsford, Atkins’ Keith Clark, and Dermot Gleeson from the Gleeson Group
    Features

    A sunny reception

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Building’s annual meeting of politicians, peers and top executives at the House of Commons

  • A profession on the rise
    Features

    A profession on the rise

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Five years ago, project managers were regarded as pen-pushers – now they are seen as indispensable. So how much work is out there and who is winning the bulk of it?

  • With its brick gables and sawtooth roof, the National Trust’s headquarters is in the functional tradition of workplace buildings
    Features

    National treasure

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Feilden Clegg Bradley’s headquarters for the National Trust is a model of crisp, functional architecture wedded to sustainable design. Martin Spring takes the train to Swindon to explain how it was done.

  • Features

    Lead times

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Despite strong order books and activity levels, most lead times are staying put, says Rob Darrow of Mace.

  • Lord Hunt
    Features

    Lord Hunt

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    John Prescott might have trouble remembering who he is, but safety minister Lord Hunt is determined that the construction industry’s big hitters will take on board what he has to say.

  • Valerie Bragg
    Features

    Head first

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Former headmistress Valerie Bragg has been a leading player in implementing Labour’s schools strategy. Here she tells us about why architecture doesn’t really matter – and how she got on with Norman Foster at the Bexley academy.

  • The big test
    Features

    The big test

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Education, education, education.

  • Features

    Appointments

    2005-07-01T00:00:00Z

    Movers and shakers this week

  • Features

    Costs: Lighting systems

    2005-06-30T16:23:00Z

    Good lighting design can give retailers a competitive advantage as well as being energy efficient. Peter Mayer of Building LifePlans looks at the whole-life costs of common lighting options

  • Features

    Checklist

    2005-06-30T16:20:00Z

    Fit-out work in the retail sector is demanding on two fronts: tight timeframes and tough demands from clients. Here Barbour Index and Scott Brownrigg go through the priorities

  • Electrical switchgear
    Features

    Products

    2005-06-30T16:14:00Z

    This week, a range of goodies as shiny and new as the items they are helping to sell, so have your own shopping spree with frameless glazing, heavy-duty switchgear and customer-proof carpeting