All Features articles – Page 568

  • Features

    The human factor

    2002-02-22T00:00:00Z

    When the market wobbles, you need key staff more than ever you did when it was booming

  • Features

    Do it the easy way

    2002-02-22T00:00:00Z

    A three-house terrace in the east end of London, built entirely from aircrete blocks, is the testing ground for a fast, efficient, hassle-free construction system that could revolutionise housebuilding. Andy Pearson finds out whether it lives up to expectations

  • Features

    Cost study: West Lothian College

    2002-02-22T00:00:00Z

    A brand new campus developed on a greenfield site in Livingston, procured through PFI by trading in the former college site, was the best way to offer West Lothian College real value for money. HBG Construction and architect RMJM Scotland explain how they accommodated both traditional and high-tech styles – ...

  • Features

    Five ways to beat stress

    2002-02-22T00:00:00Z

    A good night's sleep Medical research confirms what the overworked have always known – the more you sleep, the less stressed you feel. Eighty years ago, the UK slept nine hours a night, but since then it's fallen by 90 minutes. So lie back and snooze like it's the 1920s.A ...

  • Features

    Appointments

    2002-02-22T00:00:00Z

    ConsultantsHaley Somerset Consulting has promoted David Jenvey associate director within its construction services group.David Upton, director of civil engineer of Upton McGougan, has been appointed vice chairman of the Association of Consulting Engineers.Engineering and environmental consultant White Young Green has promoted Simon Martin to associate director, based in the Bristol ...

  • Features

    Products: The height of innovation

    2002-02-21T00:00:00Z

    In the first of our special products sections, Specifier gets a bird's eye view of the best new roofing systems and how they've been applied – including Nicholas Grimshaw & Partners' record-breaking Frankfurt trade fair roof, and how Velux uses its own windows.

  • Features

    How to fix an unfixable roof

    2002-02-21T00:00:00Z

    The roof of the Commonwealth Institute had attained the status of an urban myth among London's roofing contractors, who told awestruck tales of leaks that no man could fix. Alex Smith finds out how it was finally sorted

  • Features

    Lifetime costs: Full metal packet

    2002-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Metal roof coverings are many and varied – and so are the accompanying costs. In the first of Specifier’s Lifetime costs series, the Building Performance Group offers a guide to lifespan, whole-life costings and the durability of metal sheet roofing

  • Features

    Checklist: Commercial roofing

    2002-02-21T00:00:00Z

    In our first Checklist, Peter Claridge of Davis Langdon Schumann Smith takes you step-by-step through the essential points every commercial roofing specifier needs to consider, from identifying the roof type through to weatherproofing

  • Features

    Regulations: Don't be an April fool

    2002-02-21T00:00:00Z

    Sweeping changes to Part L of the Building Regulations come into effect on 1 April, and will have major implications for roofing specifiers. Insulation will have to be thicker, and buildings must be airtight and condensation-free. Alex Smith examines the ways you can keep up with the key changes

  • Features

    Workshop

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    Our whistlestop tour of the world of structures starts with an unfolding Olympic arch, then takes in the latest bricks and beams before reaching its destination – the first of a new occasional column, Me and IT

  • Features

    Northern light

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    Oldham's outlandish art gallery will form the centrepiece of a new cultural quarter, as part of the troubled city's ambitious regeneration plans. Martin Spring took a peek at Pringle Richards Sharrat's answer to Peckham Library.

  • Features

    On shaky ground

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    The Millennium Bridge should have been British engineering's finest hour. Instead, it has become a metaphor for a profession in crisis.

  • Features

    As hard as it gets

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    Zaha Hadid's Wolfsburg Science Centre is probably the most complicated structure humanity has ever tried to build. To get it right has required the harnessing of some great engineering minds and multiple software upgrades. Andy Pearson finds out how it will be done

  • Features

    First taste

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    Ian Shaw, personnel manager at contractor Simons Construction, explains how and why firms should put a good work experience programme in place

  • Features

    Terry Farrell

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    When an ennobled architect suggests tearing down the walls of Buckingham Palace, you know you're dealing with something of a nonconformist. Mark Leftly finds out what Terry's rebelling against.

  • Features

    Cost model: Prefabrication and preassembly

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    How can prefabrication and preassembly deliver the buildings that clients and designers aspire to? In this cost model, Davis Langdon & Everest looks at case studies of recent applications of preassembly techniques

  • Features

    The mask of command

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    After an exemplary career in the military, Sir Antony Walker has taken up service with Aqumen. He tells Marcus Fairs some of his secrets of leadership.

  • Features

    Strategic choices

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    What was so interesting about the league of European contractors Building published last month?

  • Features

    Product innovation: Composite structural beams

    2002-02-15T00:00:00Z

    Composite structural beams could revolutionise the way long-span structures such as stadiums or bridges are built. They are less than a quarter of the weight of traditional reinforced beams and have the same ultimate load capacity. Their light weight is also an advantage in situations where transporting and installing them ...