Wates gets a starring role on the X Factor, a romantic lawyer woos his lady at the Royal Courts of Justice, Mr Justice Jackson sees it all before and Arup puts on a really cool party
The final bell
Now that his stint refereeing one of the bitterest grudge matches Wembley has ever seen has finally come to an end, Mr Justice Jackson is to be rewarded with a seat in the Court of Appeal. If he can separate Multiplex and Cleveland Bridge, then the court above should be a walk in the park. However, it seems Jackson developed a taste for the fray early in his career. According to former colleague Chris Dale, one of Jackson鈥檚 cases as a young barrister was a 鈥渂loody war of attrition鈥 between an upmarket shop and its shop-fitters. Dale writes in his blog: 鈥淚t had no deep points of law in it, just two parties who hated each other and were not willing to consider that there could be any meeting-point between their respective positions.鈥 Ring any bells?
Yes, yes, but what about the partitions?
In these difficult times, contractors are understandably keen to squeeze a few drops of PR honey from whatever opportunity they can. Last week, Wates Group, normally a model of British understatement, was bragging about its appearance on ITV talent contest the X Factor. It did the 拢6.5m fit-out of the Sony BMG offices in London, which were the backdrop for an interview with pop mogul Simon Cowell. Sadly, I suspect the attention of most X Factor viewers was not on the quality of the partitioning and raised flooring.
Rough approximations
When Carl Turpin, chief executive of Oakdene, was asked by 好色先生TV in May about the number of houses the company had sold in 2007, 鈥渁bout 200鈥 was the reply. However the reality, unearthed after further questioning, was 140. Well, what鈥檚 60 units between friends? But last week, the embattled company admitted that its hopes of raising 拢5m through a share placement has fallen short by the rather larger figure of 1 million shares. Perhaps they had failed to count their investors properly, too.
Bitter chill it was
Arup staff are nothing if not prepared. Never was this more clearly demonstrated than at last week鈥檚 chilly end-of-season party at Frank Gehry鈥檚 Serpentine pavilion in Hyde Park. Autumn had well and truly arrived in central London that blustery, grey evening, but amid the swirling leaves those resourceful Arup boys and girls were kitted out in duffel coats and other assorted winterwear. Their guests didn鈥檛 get much warning though 鈥
The trekkies
I had heard that things were cooling down in the construction world at the moment, but an item of news to reach me from a desert in Namibia was enough to bring me out in a sweat. Apparently, three workers at the Prince鈥檚 Trust have just completed a four-day trek across 300km of the Namib desert in 40潞C temperatures, raising 拢10,000 in the process. The worthy cause? The trust鈥檚 Get Into Construction programme, of course. Given the current state of the industry, perhaps training in searing temperatures might not be such a bad idea 鈥 excellent preparation for working in the Gulf.
Postscript
Send any juicy industry gossip to hansom@cmpi.biz
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