Opinion – Page 624

  • Comment

    We have to close now

    2003-01-10T00:00:00Z

    If your various legal proceedings have failed to get your debtor to pay up, you might consider a winding-up petition. But you may also find that things turn against you

  • Comment

    Fog warning

    2002-12-20T00:00:00Z

    If an adjudicator decides against you and orders you to cough up, you may not have to – if you can steer your way through a murky set of exceptions.

  • Comment

    An ACE of an agreement

    2002-12-20T00:00:00Z

    The Association of Consulting Engineers' appointment documents are out, and they offer new forms and some valuable protections for the professional team

  • Comment

    Food for thought …

    2002-12-20T00:00:00Z

    e couldn't resist it. In anticipation of next week's festive feasting, our attentions turned to the traditionally less mouth-watering fare served on site. And who better to sample the pies and pasta than columnist Jonathan Meades? As restaurant critic of The Times, Meades is used to dining in rather grander ...

  • Comment

    Hansom

    2002-12-20T00:00:00Z

    Our undercover hero searches for a festive contractor and goes to a masked ball and finds he doesn't recognise anybody. Can you help him out?

  • Comment

    Gifts from Saint Nick

    2002-12-20T00:00:00Z

    What would you do if someone offered you top-notch second-hand gear at rock-bottom prices … in a carrier bag … in a pub … under the table …?

  • Comment

    The boys done good

    2002-12-20T00:00:00Z

    Society of Construction Law So, is the Delay and Disruption Protocol all it's cracked up to be? Oh, it's much better than that (say the people who wrote it)

  • Comment

    Sauce material

    2002-12-13T00:00:00Z

    Pornographic messages, Viagra ads, rampant viruses … OK, so the internet's not perfect, but it beats sifting through dusty tomes in Lincoln's Inn law library

  • Comment

    Don't get tangled in the web

    2002-12-13T00:00:00Z

    Online procurement has the same legal requirements as paper-based contracts, but care should be taken over conditions, jurisdiction and the issue of when it is binding

  • Comment

    A few simple rules

    2002-12-13T00:00:00Z

    Online collaboration tools are there to make everybody's life easier. And if you consider the legal ramifications before the project starts, they might just do so

  • Comment

    Digital building is here

    2002-12-13T00:00:00Z

    There's a scene in Minority Report where Tom Cruise walks into a fashion boutique in 2054 and is greeted by intelligent adverts that know everything about him from what clothes he buys to what toothpaste he uses. This, say retail experts, is not inconceivable. Now substitute the mall with a ...

  • Comment

    Hansom

    2002-12-13T00:00:00Z

    This week, Arup hopes to swap icons for estates, the most expensive Christmas party decorations ever, and a lesson in the dark arts of bridge refurbishment

  • Comment

    Power politics

    2002-12-13T00:00:00Z

    Consider how many of the world's problems – economic, political or climatic – are linked to energy policy. Then consider going solar on the next project

  • Comment

    Keep it clean

    2002-12-06T00:00:00Z

    A judge asked to enforce an adjudicator's decision may feel that the ruling is undermined by unfairness. So what dirty dealings might lead to this sticky situation?

  • Comment

    It's a dead cert

    2002-12-06T00:00:00Z

    Non-standard collateral warranties are set to re-emerge – and as their interpretation is so unpredictable, we'll no doubt soon be begging to see the back of them

  • Comment

    Whitehall's special needs

    2002-12-06T00:00:00Z

    This should be interesting. Whitehall is about to undertake a crash course in A level public procurement. A notoriously dim pupil, it has been flunking basic tests for years. But political expediency demands that it achieve top marks in schools, hospitals and transport by the next election. Head teacher Gordon ...

  • Comment

    Hansom

    2002-12-06T00:00:00Z

    An architects special looks at popularity, power, shame, self-delusion, envy, the uses of fruit and, of course, tree disease. Pretty much what you'd expect, really …

  • Comment

    Mechanised tree-houses

    2002-12-06T00:00:00Z

    One reason for our British spinelessness is that we don't like to make a fuss. Which wasn't always the case. In fact, our cars used to look a perfect fright …

  • Comment

    Redmond's recipe for fudge

    2002-12-06T00:00:00Z

    For an adjudicator, reaching a decision on a complex case in 28 days may be tricky – but doing a botch-job, as John Redmond suggested, doesn't do anyone any justice

  • Comment

    Shame, Brunel, shame

    2002-11-29T00:00:00Z

    You'll all know that a certain Victorian engineer just missed out on "greatest Briton". But did you know he was one of the worst employers Britain has ever had?