- Save article
FeaturesReinvention 2026: can built environment education keep up with a changing industry?
Is it time to rethink built environment training? How might a more accessible, collaborative and work-based model look?
- Save article
CommentTo govern is to choose - and the right choice must be to build
The government might have limited fiscal firepower to deal with the Gulf crisis, but it can still execute existing plans. UK construction could increasingly rely on the administration’s ability to make up its mind, says Simon Rawlinson of Arcadis
- Save article
NewsLondon commercial slowdown blamed as Keltbray racks up £1m bill for redundancy costs
Firm says figure in latest results due out later this week
- Save article
NewsPlaid Cymru plans development corporation and 20,000 social homes by 2030
Party now the biggest in Senedd after last week’s local elections
- Save article
NewsHowells’ plans to redevelop Derby’s historic Assembly Rooms set for approval this week
Music venue that has hosted gigs by The Smiths, Oasis and Elton John has been shut for over a decade
- Save article
NewsProposed 21,000-home new town under threat following Labour defeat in Enfield
Conservatives and Greens both campaigned on pledge to oppose north London scheme
- Save article
NewsHawkins Brown gets thumbs-up for downsized Manchester Met library
Approval comes a year after council approved a larger version of the scheme later deemed unviable
- Save article
NewsWork to revamp Unilever’s listed City headquarters gets green light
KPF aiming to transform buiding with all-electric scheme aiming to ‘attract new generation’ of occupiers
- Save article
CommentNow Reform UK are serious contenders, should the built environment despair or rejoice?
A government led by Nigel Farage would probably move faster on planning than its predecessors, but he may well find reality is harder to control than rhetoric, writes Richard Steer
- Save article
In partnershipBuilding Systems Thinking: Our water and wastewater systems need replumbing
Public and media discontent over hosepipe bans and storm overflows is understandable. But the UK does not have drinking water and sewage problems so much as a rainwater management problem, says Matt Wheeldon
- News

All the latest updates on building safety reformRegulations latest
- Focus













