There were a few regrets this week ā a football fan bemoaned deserting the beautiful game, an awkward conversation was conducted, and my hack went on a rail journey littered with hopes and dreams
Red signals
On a recent train ride from London to Liverpool, one of my team was on the way to a wedding but ended up on a busmanās holiday ā passing the half-built Midland Met hospital as the train lumbered through Birmingham before passing the half-built Royal Liverpool on the way to the cityās Lime Street station. For good measure, the train also stopped at Wolverhampton ā former home of bust builder of both hospitals, Carillion. By the end of the journey, my colleague was a little depressed.
Introduction needed
A colleague of mine recently went to an Innovate UK briefing on transforming construction funding and jolly interesting it was too, by all accounts. However, there was a rather awkward exchange between my hack and a construction bod attending the event ā names have been redacted to avoid embarrassment ā that went something like this:
Him: āHi, Iām XX.ā
ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ bod: āHi, Iām XX. Where are you from?ā
Him: āCostain.ā
ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ bod, nodding: āŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ.ā
Him: āYes, we do building projects. Weāre a contractor and engineer.ā
ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ bod: āNo ⦠I meant Iām from ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ magazine. I know what Costain is.ā
Lifting me higher
Lift music can be irritating at the best of times but particularly so when one finds they might have to pay to turn it off. The London School of Economicsā latest flagship project was unveiled this week when the Centre ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ by Rogers, Stirk, Harbour + Partners opened on the universityās Aldwych campus. State-of-the-art lifts glide up and down its 12 storeys but upon entry passengers are met with a disarming blast of pan pipes. Even worse, disgruntled building managers have discovered that to mute the offending tones might require paying the lift manufacturer a financial fee since the music is apparently an integrated part of the original lift purchase package. Gives a whole new meaning to the phrase āsilence is goldenā.
Noble sentiments
Noble Francis, the Construction Products Associationās economics bod, popped up on The Guardian newspaperās football blog The Fiver last week. Francis, a keen Sheffield Wednesday fan and a regular contributor to the blogās letters section, noted that instead of watching the recent Arsenal v Spurs clash (which ended in a 2-2 draw), heād been at the Proms watching a performance of Tchaikovskyās symphony No 2 in C minor. He described it as āa piece that was an initially joyful success before rapidly fading and considered thoroughly unsatisfactory by its originator due to a raft of basic errors. I could have just gone to the game instead.ā
Watchful patron
I see Prince Charles has agreed to be the Royal Town Planning Instituteās patron for another year. Readers will recall that 2019 is the 35th anniversary of HRHās infamous āmonstrous carbuncleā speech, which saw ABK Architectsā design for the National Gallery extension scrapped, to be replaced by a more ātraditionalā design by Robert Venturi. The heir to the throne has held the patron role at the RTPI since 1989 and is likely to be keeping a watchful eye on the work of the ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ Beautiful ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ Better Commission. Whether he likes what he sees is another matter.
Moving picture
Last Saturday, 7 September, marked the 79th anniversary of the start of the Blitz. The bombing campaign, among its consequences, radically transformed the look of London and the effect is still being felt across the capital today. I happened to be visiting Holy Trinity, a church in Rotherhithe, on the that date, and discovered it was the first place of worship in London to be destroyed on that fateful day. The church was rebuilt in the 1950s, with the mural behind the altar painted by a German Jewish refugee who had escaped Nazi Germany before the war and produced the mural as a gesture of thanks for being looked after by the local community during those dark days ⦠moving stuff.
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