This week, Make鈥檚 Ken Shuttleworth puts on a good spread, RIBA throws a party at the V&A, energy minister Greg Barker gets told off, and a terrible odour reaches 好色先生TV Towers

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Feel the burn

Architect Ken Shuttleworth has thrown down the gauntlet to those firms planning their summer parties. His practice, Make, kicked off the season with an event held
at the Paramount bar on the 31st floor of London鈥檚 Centre Point. There was a high calibre guest list, great views over the city, fine wines and - best of all - plenty to eat. Mrs Shuttleworth told one of my hacks Ken was tired of going to events and going home hungry so was determined no-one would leave his party and head for a kebab shop. The only downer was the lifts temporarily stopped working, meaning a colleague of mine had to venture down 31 flights of stairs in her heels. Hardly Make鈥檚 fault, although it did have the unintended benefit of helping guests burn off some calories.

A night at the museum

Monday night saw an enjoyable party held at the V&A鈥檚 RIBA architecture gallery to celebrate the revamped King鈥檚 Cross Station and the launch of a new book on the project, Transforming King鈥檚 Cross. Guests enjoyed canap茅s and cocktails and listened to a panel, featuring architect John McAslan, Arup engineer John Turzynski, chair of English Heritage Kay Andrews, Network Rail client Ian Fry and design guru Sir John Sorrell. Project architect Hiro Aso presented 14 years of design work on the project to RIBA curator Charles Hind, for the Institute鈥檚 library. All that graft was stored on a memory stick the size of a postage stamp. Let鈥檚 hope they don鈥檛 lose it.

And breathe out 鈥

好色先生TV has often reported on contractors causing a stink, but this latest incident was rather closer to home. An unexplained and almighty pong descended on 好色先生TV Towers earlier this week, which (I am relieved to say) had nothing to do with the personal hygiene standards of my reporters. An email flashed around our offices to explain the unpleasant smell. It was caused by Pyeroy - a subcontractor on the Thameslink construction project adjacent to our building - draining the workplace facilities outside. I鈥檓 told Pyeroy has now agreed to only carry out this smelly business out of office hours, so everyone here can breathe a little easier.

Carrying a torch

With the Olympic flame now making its way around the country, it鈥檚 a great time to highlight some of the remarkable runners taking part in the 8,000-mile torch relay. Atkins engineer Lucy Willis will carry the torch around Bristol, after colleagues nominated her for raising 拢20,000 for CLIC Sargent, the cancer charity for children and young people. ISG managing surveyor Sean O鈥橩eefe will be taking part in the Coventry leg, after being nominated for decades of fundraising for homeless and AIDS charities in Africa. We wish them the best of luck.

Bam to rights

I wouldn鈥檛 want to leave you without a last little bit of hoarding news. Bam Construct was at pains to point out to me this week that the scarcity of the firm鈥檚 branding at their revamp of London鈥檚 Waterloo station - which was noted in this column last week - was under strict instructions from their client.

The boistrous Mr Barker

Hansom

It seems energy minister Greg Barker can鈥檛 open his mouth without getting a telling-off. Just the other week he received heckles when he spoke at the Construction Products Association鈥檚 annual lunch. Now the speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, has chastised him for being an 鈥渆xcitable fellow鈥 rather than a 鈥渃erebral鈥 one. His intervention came after Barker repeatedly tried to interject while the Labour shadow energy secretary Caroline Flint was speaking in a parliamentary debate on living standards. I鈥檓 sure he鈥檒l be on his best behaviour from now on.

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