This month we were introduced to edible landscapes, aesthetic motorway gantries ā and our fourth construction new minister of the year, so far
Looks like rain, dear
I was rather surprised to learn from an interview elsewhere in these pages with contractor Glencar that a warehouse scheme it is building off the M6 in Warwickshire features āedible landscapesā and, furthermore, includes āreindeer moss wallsā. Iām told that Native Americans use reindeer moss, a lichen, to treat diarrhoea ā presumably brought on by a good munch on all those edible landscapes.
Mysteries of the motorway
The following is from the blurb accompanying news of a design competition being organised by the RIBA: āThe look of Englandās motorways has evolved in recent decades and now the search is on to redesign one of the networkās most iconic features ā the gantry.ā Who knew?
Unimpressed
It was good to see Historic England boss Duncan Wilson slumming it like the rest of us and making his way to the Andaz hotel and a consultation on plans by Sellar to redevelop the adjoining Liverpool Street station. Iām told other heritage groups, including the Victorian Society and Save, were given their own private briefings on the proposals before last monthās public exhibition. It hasnāt done much good ā both are still dead against the plans.
The reportās facilitators were grateful the pandemic had forced them onto Teams, concerned as they were that industry representatives might otherwise have ācome to blowsā over disagreements
Must stop not meeting like this
One wonders if new construction minister Nusrat Ghani, the fourth appointed this year, will actually get to sit down with the people at the Construction Leadership Council? The last two ā Lord Callanan (who?) and Jackie Doyle-Price (eh?) ā certainly didnāt make much of an impression, with neither finding any time in their short tenures for a meeting with chair Mark Reynolds or his staff. Then again, Reynolds would be forgiven for thinking thatās the definition of a win-win.
Now youāre talking
The Construction Productivity Taskforceās private sector playbook, launched last month, has been warmly greeted. But things were rather fraught in its creation, my hack heard. The reportās facilitators were grateful that the pandemic had forced them onto Teams, a little concerned as they were that industry representatives might otherwise have ācome to blowsā over disagreements. And once that had been ironed out, one poor consultant became rather worried after āno one spokeā in the first project meeting. The blame was laid on an initial reluctance to information share, rather suggesting industry collaboration still has a bit of a way to go.
Another fine mess
I get the impression that those demolition firms waiting to formally find out how much they will be fined by the Competition and Markets Authority for their roles in bidārigging just want the whole thing done with now, to take their punishment and move on. Itās been going on for nearly four years and an announcement on the level of fines that had been due last month has now been pushed into January. At least, thatās the hope. āWho knows when it will happen,ā one firm told my scribe. āWeāll all be retired at this rate.ā
Train of thought
I hear that Chelsea FC, some years ago now, looked at relocating its Stamford Bridge stadium to Waterloo station ā well, above the Victorian arches at the station, to be precise. Plans were apparently drawn up by Grimshaw but, like those produced later by Herzog & de Meuron, nothing ever came of them. Intrigued, my hack enquired: why Waterloo? āI really donāt know,ā said my baffled mole. āGood transport links?ā
Walkies!
A Mace team working on the refurbishment of a cargo tunnel at Heathrow airport is using a robotic dog to help it out. It spots trip hazards in the dark and takes scans of completed work. So far, so good. But the dog has been called Dave after the project team held a competition to name it. Surely, given its job is essentially to roam around, it should have been called Rover?
Send any juicy industry gossip to Mr Joseph Aloysius Hansom, who founded ŠŌ°ÉµēĢØ in 1843, at hansom@building.co.uk
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