Khan looks back at his predecessor鈥檚 record, two museums cause bidding wars (of different sorts), some politicos put aside old quarrels and there鈥檚 more history than we can dig up. Plus, Robert De Niro鈥檚 waiting (to open a hotel)

Hansom HT

Safe as houses?

Londoners conscious of the capital鈥檚 inability to get anywhere near delivering the amount of homes required will be interested that new mayor Sadiq Khan is determined to 鈥減ersonally get to grips with the mess that has been left behind鈥 by predecessor Boris Johnson. This week the new mayor observed that Johnson had presided over an affordable housing delivery quota of just 13%, against Khan鈥檚 aspired-to 50%, and that 100,000 construction-industry apprenticeships had foundered. However, Khan pointedly makes clear that City Hall is 鈥渘ot going to be able to turn things around overnight鈥, and further dampens expectation by promising to continue Johnson鈥檚 policy of developing Transport for London sites as his first course of action. As you were, then.

Going once, going twice 鈥

Hats off to David Adjaye, the late, great Zaha Hadid, Thomas Heatherwick and Antony Gormley for contributing items to an auction that raised more than 拢1.1m for the Design Museum鈥檚 new home in Kensington. A total of 55 pieces were sold by specialist auctioneer Phillips, including a solar clock designed by Adjaye, a set of three marble tables by Hadid, and a bronze version of Heatherwick鈥檚 Spun chair. The highest bid of the night was for Gormley鈥檚 Small Spall III statue, which raised 拢158,500. The museum now has just under 拢2m left to find before it opens.

Affordable housing is history

I hear the design director of the Victoria & Albert Museum has conceded that the venerable organisation could be complicit in driving creative types out of parts of east London because of gentrification aided in part by its new base in the Olympic Park. This is a tantalising conundrum for students of the 鈥渞egeneration games鈥, as it essentially questions whether it is possible for large-scale transformational projects to be too successful, and  - indeed - how prescriptive we can really be with our regeneration goals. All food for thought for when London鈥檚 next opportunity to host an Olympiad rolls around, when - who knows?  - perhaps somewhere south of the river will get a look-in.

Best of frenemies

Those of us who lived through the Napoleonic Wars and subsequent Pax Britannica are especially well placed to enjoy the nuances of the current EU referendum. My hacks have taken a view, based on extensive research in the industry, and I am content. Meanwhile, it is fun to sift the mounds of claim and counter-claim issued by both sides for scant crumbs of fact. For reasons I know not, however, the sight of George Osborne, Vince Cable, and Ed Balls standing side-by-side and espousing a shared opinion has caused my right eyebrow to fix itself significantly above normal operating height. Time, I fear, may not heal this particular malady.

Digging deep

Big ticket infrastructure projects like HS2 and Thames Tideway could lag behind because of a skills shortage. But not just for the lack of skilled labourers or engineers. According to Historic England (HE), it鈥檚 the crippling lack of archaeologists which could hold up our country鈥檚 most important schemes. Thanks to planning permission policy introduced 25 years ago, developers must fund archaeological excavations, and the lack of archaeologists in the country to carry out those excavations has been dwindling. HE says there are only 3,000 people employed in commercial archaeology in England, a figure that has grow by 25% in the next six years if it is to meet the current pipeline of work.


Rob

An offer they can鈥檛 refuse?

Hotel industry stalwarts who wonder what actor Robert De Niro has to offer their sector need only look at the acres of press coverage garnered by plans for an 83-room boutique establishment in Covent Garden. The extent to which the screen legend will have hands-on involvement in the venture, dubbed the Wellington Hotel, is unclear. Unsurprisingly, hacks have had fun capitalising on a host of puns related to De Niro鈥檚 film output in their stories. One hopes the little fockers on Westminster council鈥檚 planning committee will be able to put aside the unwholesome images of crime, gambling and vice associated with De Niro鈥檚 celluloid work when weighing the pros and cons of the scheme.

Send any juicy industry gossip to hansom@ubm.com

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