All Building articles in 1999 Issue 37
View all stories from this issue.
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Features
Top priorities
We could put men on the moon but couldn't make roofs that installers didn't fall through, says Brendan Dowd, who wants everyone to take more care of each other.
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Features
Moonbase Walsall
The surreal lunar landscape may look like something out of Space 1999, but it is actually a roof of somewhere far more down to earth – a bus station in Walsall.
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Comment
Make it legal
First person homeowners want a national approach to the cowboy problem that has the force of law. A new bill would give it to them.
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Features
Justice at the speed of light
The new payment rules are getting disputes worked out in only 28 days – none of that hanging around waiting for the other chap to go bust. But the courts can move even faster.
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Features
Just the job
The IT manager and former travel rep tells Elaine Knutt why you can change direction without getting in a spin.
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News
Morrison moves into the home repair market
Contractor’s FM arm to set up national domestic network to cash in on cowboy builder fears.
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Features
High noon?
Nick Raynsford is now faced with the crucial decision on how tough to make the quality mark, the centrepiece of his anti-cowboy plan. What factors will he be taking into account?
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Features
One up at half time
Coventry City has a mountain to climb – a £122m stadium, a controversial site and Cardiff’s example of what can go wrong still fresh in the memory. The good news is that, so far, it’s all working out.
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News
Goodall heads for McAlpine showdown
Brunswick Developments boss Andrew Goodall calls for meeting as Alfred McAlpine board rejects 260p-a-share offer.
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Features
The trouble with GMP
Just as the Holy Roman Empire was neither holy nor Roman, parties to a guaranteed maximum price contract should realise that price is not really guaranteed or maximum. If they don’t, they could be in trouble …
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News
Mowlem hints that SBG sale will fund FM growth
Disposal of scaffolding business could raise £105m for facilities management acquisition, say analysts.
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News
Peterhouse to expand
Construction-to-services group Peterhouse says it wants to attract investment by acquiring a listed company, probably a services-based firm, in the next nine months.Chairman David Jackson said Peterhouse must increase its market capitalisation from £56m to £100m-150m because many investors were not interested in smaller companies.Peterhouse Group, which floated on the ...
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Features
Entering extra time
A client makes a change to its building, so the contractor wants more time to build it. Believe it or not, the law was vague on how the extra time should be assessed. Now it may be clearer.
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Features
Replenishing the earth's resources
Planted roofs are still a rarity in the UK, unlike in Germany, where planning permission for developments on greenfield sites is granted only if the building’s roof and landscaping can provide greenery equivalent to the square meterage lost under concrete.The UK market for eco-roofs is a fraction of the size ...
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Features
Fluid dynamics
The arching, fluid lines engineered by Buro Happold at Stuttgart Station give the impression that its concrete roof is flowing down to the platforms like molten lava. This is liquid architecture.
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Features
Keeping the racket down
Acoustic designers could be costing clients money by over-specifying acoustic solutions. Now, software has been developed that tracks how sound moves through a building and how to stop it.
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News
London Eye may miss turn-of-the-century deadline
Design fault casts doubts over Millennium Wheel’s new year’s eve deadline as schedule put back four weeks.
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News
New tax crisis as Revenue runs out of paper
The construction industry’s new tax scheme is facing a crisis because the Inland Revenue is running out of vouchers.A Revenue source admitted that it has only 200 000 CIS25 forms left, less than a week’s supply, and said contractors should use their remaining copies of the tax repayment form only ...
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News
Fifteen firms listed for two MOD prime contracts
Ministry adopts new procurement method for £20m-30m Hampshire offices and £8m Essex barracks.