All Interviews articles – Page 33

  • Features

    Paper man

    2002-11-29T00:00:00Z

    Praised by Time magazine as one of the great innovators of the 21st century, the enigmatic Shigeru Ban divides his time between designing prestigious commissions and shelters for the destitute. Marcus Fairs met the Japanese architect who does it all with paper tubes.

  • Features

    The equaliser

    2002-11-22T00:00:00Z

    Ras Patel, himself the victim of a racial attack, is in charge of ridding construction of racism. He tells Tom Broughton that the best way forward is to persuade companies that racial equality makes good business sense.

  • Features

    A Man and his tools

    2002-11-15T00:00:00Z

    BuildOnline's Mark Oliver chose an odd moment to join a dotcom. Yet he is confident that his firm's collaboration programs will trigger a computer revolution – if only firms can find a way to upgrade those soft pink things that operate them.

  • Features

    Peter Gershon

    2002-11-08T00:00:00Z

    Hired to overhaul government procurement, Peter Gershon is a huge fan of the PFI. But, as Marcus Fairs found, the chief executive of the Office of Government Commerce is uncomfortable singing its praises.

  • Features

    Michael meacher

    2002-11-01T00:00:00Z

    The minister has a few modest targets for you to meet: like eliminating carbon dioxide emissions, beating the Germans, making Part L even tougher, rescuing pandas, preventing floods – and saving the world … Matthew Richards finds out more.

  • Features

    Young man in a hurry

    2002-10-25T00:00:00Z

    The dynamic new head of English Heritage is out to blow the dust off the conservation quango. Martin Spring meets charismatic super-curator Simon Thurley.

  • Features

    Power to the people

    2002-10-18T00:00:00Z

    As a key player in Whitehall policy-making, Richard Rogers is an unlikely champion of devolved government. But, as Marcus Fairs finds out, he now thinks urban regeneration will only happen if decision are taken by the people on the ground

  • Features

    After Wembley

    2002-10-11T00:00:00Z

    Two years of working flat out trying to get the new national stadium built would be enough to persuade most of us to hang up our boots, but Paul Gandy, managing director of the UK arm of Multiplex, has set himself a new goal – building, rather than demolishing, famous ...

  • Features

    The artful dodger

    2002-10-04T00:00:00Z

    Glenn Allison is planning a campaign to persuade the English public that they really do want to buy timber-frame houses, regardless of what they may have read about fire risks. Here he cleverly avoids telling us why …

  • Features

    A message to you

    2002-09-27T00:00:00Z

    Georg Sieber knows what direction people panic in. He knows what terrorists are about to do. He even knows how to stop them, although clients don't always listen. We met the brilliant psychologist who has a chilling warning for contractors.

  • Features

    The new man at the top

    2002-09-13T00:00:00Z

    The guessing is finally over. Peter Rogers has replaced Sir John Egan as head of the ultimate industry body, the strategic forum. Here he takes Marcus Fairs through his agenda – and explains where Egan went wrong.

  • Features

    Trying times

    2002-08-30T00:00:00Z

    When Terry Morgan took the helm at Tube Lines, he thought he would be running part of the London Underground in a matter of weeks. Then the legal challenges began … Phil Clark finds out how the former international rugby player has been using his extra time.

  • Features

    No yes-man

    2002-08-16T00:00:00Z

    Although the new CIC chairman says he is happy to preach the gospel according to Sir John Egan, Turlogh O'Brien will also give you chapter and verse on where he thinks the great man went wrong. Andy Pearson found out more.

  • Features

    The likely lad

    2002-08-09T00:00:00Z

    At just 30, Christopher Leslie is already the consummate politician. But how much does the man in charge of the Building Regulations actually know about construction? Andy Pearson finds out.

  • Features

    When Wimpey met Wayne

    2002-08-02T00:00:00Z

    Last year, fashion guru Wayne Hemingway launched a very public attack on volume housing. So housebuilder Wimpey offered him a job. Marcus Fairs found out what happened next …

  • Features

    Shadow boxer

    2002-07-26T00:00:00Z

    Tory construction spokesman Robert Key is something of a country gent – but don't expect him to pull any punches Gordon Brown's latest spending spree or the industry's skills crisis.

  • Features

    Metal Michelangelo

    2002-07-12T00:00:00Z

    Bill Tustin is a huge Sid James-soundalike with the mind of an angel and the beard of a gnome who can build and price structures as complex as the London Eye in his head while making clothing out of the bowels of journalists. Marcus Fairs spends a happy afternoon being ...

  • Features

    David Fison

    2002-06-28T00:00:00Z

    Just when you thought you'd never hear another good word about the PFI, along comes the new chief of Skanska UK, and he's barely able to contain his enthusiasm for it. Marcus Fairs went to meet him

  • Features

    Sunny Jem

    2002-06-21T00:00:00Z

    Jeremy Leggett was an oil prospector when he saw the light. Now he's a workaholic eco-prophet who's converted his principles into a photovoltaic business supplying one-third of the British market. Marcus Fairs spends a dazzling hour with a solar-powered man.

  • Features

    Best of British

    2002-06-14T00:00:00Z

    The Joseph Rowntree Foundation is making life better for thousands of people – and no, it's not handing out free chocolate. Foundation director Lord Best told Martin Spring about his organisation's innovative plans to tackle the housing crisis.