Our business minister grapples with some paperwork, a Victorian refurb gets distressed (but in a good way), Google shows its true colours, and, as it鈥檚 almost Christmas, we contemplate nuclear extinction
Reading between the lines
To Nuclear 2018 being held last week in London鈥檚 Victoria. Business minister Richard Harrington, the man who popped into a Construction Leadership Council event in October for a whopping six minutes, stayed a bit longer this time. My hack reckons he was there for about 20 minutes, firing up attendees. 鈥淲e were given [anti-nuclear] leaflets by a couple of very civilised protesters outside,鈥 he remarked. 鈥淚鈥檝e not read it but I鈥檓 sure it is full of inaccuracies and spelling mistakes.鈥 My hack received one as well. The chief sub on this title says there鈥檚 not one typo and, as for inaccuracies, the leaflet takes a similar line to Sir John Armitt鈥檚 National Infrastructure Commission 鈥 that nuclear will ultimately cost taxpayers more than pursuing renewables. Not reading things seems to be Harrington鈥檚 forte. Over the summer, he told journalists at an FMB event he would only answer questions on the report the group had just produced 鈥 except he hadn鈥檛 read it. He鈥檚 fast shaping up to be a real asset for the industry.
Dying is risky
Much of the nuclear conference entailed discussions about getting the private sector to take on more of the sector鈥檚 risk. 鈥淰ery remote but high impact events can put the private sector at risk in terms of investments,鈥 said Peter Hall, partner at law firm Norton Rose Fulbright. 鈥淔or example, nuclear extinction 鈥 the consequences are very severe.鈥 Severe indeed but I鈥檓 bothered by one thing: how much point is there insuring against extinction of any kind?
It鈥檚 all in the timing
HS2 has been running speed dating events to hook up local SMEs with the big contractors running the show. They鈥檙e given a few minutes each, with a giant clock on the wall timing each meeting. What on earth can they talk about, I wondered aloud? 鈥淗ow about 鈥榟ave you got the time?鈥欌 a colleague helpfully chipped in.
Read: Latest on HS2
Gym life, but not as we know it
The well-heeled denizens of Highbury Fields are not overly burdened in life 鈥 a recent headline in the local Islington Gazette was typical: 鈥淗ighbury Leisure Centre apologises for lack of shower gel after gym-goer warns: 鈥楾his could end in disaster鈥.鈥 So when said centre burnt to the ground in September it was big news. This week the centre re-opened its doors just 12 weeks after the fire. The pool remains closed as parties squabble over who is to pay for its refurbishment but there is now, the centre boasts, 鈥渁 fully-functional gym, changing rooms, sauna and steam room, fitness studios and hot showers鈥. Let鈥檚 just hope they鈥檝e remembered the shower gel.
Not so appeeling
Willmott Dixon has been showing hacks around its completed work to refurbish a disused Victorian theatre at Alexandra Palace in north London. It鈥檚 been unused for 80 years and my colleagues tell me the refurbishment mimics some of the peeling paint and plaster when it was last used all those years ago. It鈥檚 called 鈥渁rrested decay鈥, apparently. More cynical members of the public might call it 鈥渢ypical builders鈥.
Time to bury good news?
The same day that Interserve announced it was in debt-for-equity talks, it revealed it has been awarded a 拢25m contract by Cwm Taf University Health Board, as part of the next phase of the 拢36m redevelopment of Prince Charles hospital in Merthyr, being funded by the Welsh government. Timing, as they say, is everything.
Just look it up
Lendlease is cracking on with Google鈥檚 new headquarters at King鈥檚 Cross in London. There鈥檚 still no indication to passers-by what the job is 鈥 instead they are having to make do with the rather baffling name of KGX1. The more eagle-eyed, however, might have noticed Google鈥檚 android symbol being stamped on the concrete cores in Google鈥檚 corporate colours that are going up at the site. It鈥檚 a sort of ongoing Google doodle.
Send any juicy industry gossip to hansom@building.co.uk
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