Opinion – Page 646
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The delivery boys
If Tony Blair is to fulfil his "instruction to deliver" he must tackle officialdom's failure to implement policy effectively – a source of much misery
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Was Heseltine right?
Regeneration Despite its efforts, the government is still failing to tackle urban deprivation. We look at why it's so hard to make a difference
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It's all in the timing
The Brompton hospital case turned on the definition of concurrent delays. But it asked more questions about extensions of time than it answered
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It's a long story …
This is the tale of a couple who bought an old house overlooking Beachy Head – and then found that the surveyor had sold them a pup …
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Triumph at court
Where a parent company pays for loss incurred by a subsidiary, the subsidiary can still be compensated – even though the parent was not a party to the contract
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Hold on to the Rottweiler
Going into a dispute with all guns blazing may make you feel better, but it's a lousy way of keeping business and may well cost you an arm and a leg
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What a shower!
The Tories' performance in the election was embarrassing, hopeless, abysmal – which isn't surprising when you look at the calibre of those in charge
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The can-carriers
A spate of rulings on project managers have disproved the adage that they are mere paper pushers. Their role is wide-ranging – and so are their liabilities
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We'll all be losers
The Construction Industry Board thinks each side should pay its own costs in adjudication. This is all wrong and could even result in more cases ending up in court
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More bilge from Europe?
When Thames Water did nothing to stop a home being flooded by sewage, the common law of England was found wanting. The Human Rights Act mopped up the mess
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Legal letters
There is a place for retentionSir: As a project manager with a local authority, dealing with work ranging in price from hundreds to millions of pounds, I feel I must comment on Rudi Klein's article attacking cash retentions (4 May, page 57). Although I agree with a lot of what ...
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Who's suing whom
Writs issued in the Technology and Construction CourtUnex Investment Properties vs Alfred McAlpine and various othersUnex Investment Properties of Setchworth, Cambridgeshire, is suing Alfred McAlpine Construction, Forum Architects, Hannah, Reed and Associates, Keith Francis Pitts and Margaret Siobhan Pitts for damages for breach of contract pursuant to deeds dated 2 ...
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Dogs in the manger
Everyone agrees that construction must abandon adversarial practices – except for QSs. Why are they so out of step with the rest of the industry?
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Rapid response force
The DETR is consulting on how to make adjudication fairer and more effective. There's still time to let it know what you think
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Fuzzy logic
How far should consultants' drawings go in telling builders how to do their job? In theory a long way; in practice there's many a slip 'twixt cup and lip
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Minding the gap
Under the PFI, clients don't start paying until a facility is ready for use. The problem for builders is that this may be some time after the building has been completed
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All of a flutter
Despite the increasing popularity of adjudication, it still has some problems. Indeed, in some ways it is little better than a trip to the bookies
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Pevsner at 50
The Buildings of England, published 50 years ago, was a triumph. Rather than telling us what to see, Pevsner freed us to see for ourselves
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Blame the parents
An effective way to get results in a dispute with A subsidiary is to launch an action against its parent company on the basis of a parent company guarantee
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Do what you do
Fish swim, birds fly, dogs bark and politicians lie. Similarly, lawyers have a duty to fight a hopeless case, even if they know they will lose. But they can't lie