This week: sky-high asking prices at Centre Point, an engineer gets stuck into a project, an enigmatic Libeskind video, rail strikes make Parisians go green, and a former Balfour Beatty student is on target

Hansom new 2008

A select target customer

Who would buy a home in the revamped Centre Point, I wonder? More to the point: who can afford to buy a home in the London landmark, which is coming to the end of its reinvention and will feature a 拢55m penthouse? I鈥檓 told the flats will pique the interest of downsizers looking to leave the more expensive bits of the capital behind. At this point I鈥檓 reminded of some of the starting prices at the brutalist icon. Two-beds begin at 拢3.5m with three-beds going for 拢7.5m. Blimey, what are these people downsizing from?

Hole lot of trouble

Sticking with Centre Point, the original engineer on the job, Wilem Frischmann, told the story of how he worked out how to put a 34-storey tower above a warren of sewers and tube tunnels in the mid-1960s. The solution was to drill close-packed piles into the ground. To make sure everything was as it should be, he inspected the holes himself, even getting stuck in one and having to spend the night there before being rescued the following day. That鈥檚 commitment for you, I say. And a good argument for carrying a mobile phone on site.

Architect in double Dutch video shock 

Ping! An email invites me to watch a video of Daniel Libeskind, the architect behind the masterplan for the reconstruction of New York鈥檚 World Trade Center, which I鈥檓 told 鈥渋s as divergent as the man himself, moving between his philosophical approach to time, his drawing practice, and the role of absent architectures鈥. I admit I have no idea what any of that means.

France au naturel

France is being hit by strikes in protest at labour reforms proposed by the French government. Rail workers are downing tools for two days a week until the end of June as a result. To cap it all, a software glitch with the Paris equivalent of the Boris bike has meant they are all locked in their docking stations, standing idle. Into all this ventured one of my brave hacks who was invited to take a look at the French equivalent of Center Parcs. Called Villages Nature Paris, the scheme is next door to Disneyland Paris and promises a 鈥渃omplete change of scene to help you reconnect with the things that truly matter鈥. Frazzled Parisians must be heading there in droves.

Mind the gap

Hot on the heels of the construction industry鈥檚 gender pay gap revelations comes news of more workplace discrimination. Estate agent Savoy Stewart analysed a recent YouGov poll and found that more than one-third (38%) of women felt their gender was the reason they were spoken to in a 鈥減atronising manner鈥 at work, compared with 6% of men. One-fifth of women also believed being female was why they were given less complex tasks than similarly qualified co-workers, which I鈥檓 guessing means men. Savoy Stewart鈥檚 chief executive, Darren Best, said the data showed more needed to be done 鈥渢o bring women on the same pedestal as men鈥. I鈥檓 not sure it鈥檚 a pedestal that women want, Mr Best, but we get your drift.

Scot hot shot

A student civil engineer who has worked for Balfour Beatty on a number of transport jobs in Scotland won gold in one of the men鈥檚 shooting events at the recent Commonwealth Games in Australia. Balfour Beatty describes 21-year-old David McMath from the University of Strathclyde as a 鈥渟harpshooter鈥. I wonder if some at the firm are tempted to suggest he be redeployed onto the late-running, loss-making Aberdeen bypass it鈥檚 building to take pot shots at the thing.

New library 2721 tim cornbill pressimagenew 5

Taken as read

I see that another Brum library has been shortlisted for a RIBA award. Four years after Mecanoo鈥檚 Library of Birmingham was fighting it out for the main Stirling prize, Associated Architects鈥 new library for the University of Birmingham is up for a regional award. Both were built by Carillion and if the university鈥檚 new addition does win a gong when they are handed out next month, I suspect the information about the builder behind it might be, ahem, a bit of a closed book.

Send any juicy industry gossip to hansom@assemblemediagroup.co.uk

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