All Building articles in 1 July 2016 – Page 3
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Features
V&A: Underground art
The V A’s £49.5m subterranean extension had to be built without closing the main museum and without damaging the listed facades of the surrounding buildings. Building reports on how Arup, AL_A and Wates made it without a wobble
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Comment
Settlement agreement: Crossing the line
Does the right to adjudication in the underlying construction contract still apply if you have entered into in a settlement agreement? A recent case in the TCC provides guidance
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Features
Tracker: May 2016
The construction activity index fell by a point in May following a brief peak in April, while individual sub-sectors enjoy mixed fortunes
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News
ChapmanBDSP to top £20m revenue this year
Firm has also developed its overseas presence with a 20-strong team now operating in the Middle East
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News
Mayor bids to calm Brexit nerves with housing associations meeting
Sadiq Khan’s office to speak to firms next week
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Comment
Brexit is an economist's worst nightmare
The political fallout from last week’s referendum result makes economic forecasting almost impossible - we have embarked on a huge change with no clear plan and so can only be vague about our future
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News
Brexit: What effect will it have on you?
Building’s news desk examines what the Leave vote will mean for five key areas of construction
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Comment
New homes: Time to crack on
A sense of urgency and a healthy dose of ambition is needed if there is any chance of unlocking the potential of public land across the UK and hitting the target of 1 million new homes by 2020
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Features
Brexit: The vote that shook Britain
It’s hit construction hard - on the stock exchange, in boardrooms and on sites across the UK, people are starting to rethink an industry that is no longer part of the EU. But what exactly will change and how quickly?
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Comment
A 16 year old's view on Brexit
Last week’s referendum has affected every British citizen, including those too young to vote
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Comment
Online poll: Brexit effect
Do you think Brexit will have a negative long-term effect on the UK construction industry? Results are in
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Comment
Brexit will be good for Britain
Make no mistake, last week’s vote to leave the EU has created many unknowns but construction is an entrepreneurial and essential industry and will do better unfettered by EU regs
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Features
Building intelligence: Q1 2016
The latest figures from the Office for National Statistics show that total construction output grew over 2015, but that things are less buoyant for the first quarter of this year
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Comment
Mental health issues: Turn the lights on
The industry must make progress on ensuring employees’ mental wellbeing – or brace itself for a rush of legal claims
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Comment
Brexit: What happens next?
The result is in, but what will be the long-term effect for construction?
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