It may have more than its fair share of squabbles, but the construction community is a family like any other. Adam Branson gathers everybody round the table, gets the albums out, and looks back on the people and events that made 2013. Additional reporting by Peter Klein, Joey Gardiner and Sarah Richardson

This year 好色先生TV is hosting Christmas, so cancel the turkey and come on over. It鈥檚 been five years since we had anything much to celebrate, but as 2013 draws to a close it feels like a time to let bygones be bygones, to locate every spare chair in the house and to gather around the table for a proper knees-up.
Come in. Make yourself comfortable. You鈥檙e looking well. That diet you鈥檝e been on for the last few years seems to be working, you鈥檝e certainly lost a lot of fat. You do look a bit tired, but that鈥檚 what endless restructuring does to a person. There are a few folks who won鈥檛 be able to join us this year, but we鈥檒l raise a toast to them over dinner.

Anyway, the bird is in the oven, the wine鈥檚 been opened and the mince pies are baked. It won鈥檛 be ready for another half an hour or thereabouts - but no, you can鈥檛 sue for liquidated damages. Before we tuck in, let鈥檚 catch up. So, just how was 2013 for you?

The year in quotes

Blacklist Support Group

Source: Tim Foster

Dave Smith

鈥淲e鈥檝e got the right policies, there鈥檚 no doubt about that. Don鈥檛 tell me we鈥檙e not doing great stuff鈥
Ed Davey, energy secretary

鈥淵ou can shoot me if I鈥檓 planning minister after the next election鈥
Nick Boles, planning minister. In the following week鈥檚 reshuffle, Boles sadly remained in post

鈥淵ou are the most evasive and potentially dishonest witness I鈥檝e encountered at this committee and frankly in 20 years of practising at the bar鈥
Conservative MP Simon Reevell to UKCG director Stephen Ratcliffe during his appearance at the Scottish Affairs Committee鈥檚 inquiry into blacklisting

鈥淵ou end up with a bloody QS on one side of the table battling with a commercial manager on the other side of the table, with a trade specialist commercial guy getting stuck in as well. It鈥檚 bullshit. Why are clients having to suffer like that?鈥
Ian Eggers, co-founder of Rise, on inefficiencies in the traditional contractor model

鈥淏IM is nothing more than a posh set of drawings on the desktop or iPad鈥
Tony Bingham, barrister and 好色先生TV columnist

Greg Barker

Source:

Greg Barker

鈥淭hey could have bought us for 拢8m and they offered 拢6m, so we called them a cab鈥
Mark Reynolds, Mace chief executive, on the 1998 attempt by Atkins to buy the company

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 be sleeping if we didn鈥檛 have 10,000 [signed up for the green deal] by the end of the year鈥
Energy minister Greg Barker. The latest figures at the time of going to press are 813.

鈥淲e had a plan and we had a price for May Gurney. There was no way we were prepared to compromise on that approach鈥
Andrew Wyllie, Costain chief executive, on being beaten by Kier in the bid to buy May Gurney

鈥淭hey鈥檝e got the cheek to say they鈥檝e apologised. I鈥檓 the one person to have made a claim against them and they have not apologised to me.鈥
Dave Smith, Blacklist Support Group, on contractor Carillion

A year of change

There is no doubt that 2013 has been a dramatic year for the industry. Looking back to January, there were fears of a triple-dip recession and the mood was one of ongoing gloom. Fast forward to December, however, and the industry appears confident that the recovery is real and there are even fears about an overheating housing market.

The past year has seen many of the big contractors either announce or implement major restructures. Balfour Beatty, Morgan Sindall, Carillion, Severfield-Rowen, Laing O鈥橰ourke, Lend Lease Construction 鈥 the list of contractors that have undergone - or continue to undergo - extensive restructuring is long. For some, consolidation was the order of the day, with plans hatched before the current market revival seemed possible. For others, it鈥檚 about reshaping the business to take advantage of the upturn. For staff, however, it鈥檚 all been unnerving.

In probably the biggest business story of the year, contractor Kier completed its 拢221m takeover of services firm May Gurney, having trumped Costain鈥檚 proposed 拢178m merger with the company. The deal, first announced in April, resulted in the creation of a business turning over 拢2.8bn, with Kier combining its 拢445m services business with May Gurney to create a 拢1.1bn-turnover services arm deriving two-thirds of its revenues from local authorities. The deal also resulted in around 200 job cuts.

BIM is nothing more than a posh set of drawings on the desktop or iPad

Specialist contractors had a mixed year, with some encouraging signs of growth but ongoing issues with late payment. In November a National Specialist Contractors Council report stated that 49% of its members had reported an increase in orders in the previous quarter, up from 27% six months earlier. The balance between companies seeing increases and decreases in orders was the healthiest the NSCC had seen since the end of 2004.

Conversely, the NSCC survey found that it was taking even longer for them to get paid, with just 6% of respondents being paid within 30 days.

Indeed, despite the nascent recovery, the year has seen some well-established companies go to the wall, with green shoots sprouting too late for some. In many cases, late payment was cited by administrators as a key factor. In April, Wales鈥 biggest steelwork contractor, Rowecord Engineering, which built the roof for the Olympic aquatics centre, fell into administration at a cost of 430 jobs. Warrington-based Daniel Contractors went into administration in May, blaming contractual disputes, late payment and retentions, followed by M&E specialist Farrelly. September saw the collapse of M&E contractor HPEMS, which administrators later blamed on 拢1.3m owed to the company by four main contractors.

Undoubtedly, the housebuilding sector has been the strongest part of the construction economy. But while in the popular press all of the 2013 rebound in the housing market is down to the launch of the Help to Buy scheme in the March Budget, the reality is that by February housebuilders were calling 2013 the strongest market since the crash.

I wouldn鈥檛 be sleeping if we didn鈥檛 have 10,000 [signed up for the green deal] by the end of the year

However, chancellor George Osborne鈥檚 injection of 拢3.5bn of off-balance sheet money to new homes, with the promise of further government underpinning for the whole market from the start of 2014, clearly had a galvanising effect. By June builders were complaining of shortages of bricks and blocks, with planning reforms also contributing to what analysts were describing as a 鈥減erfect market鈥 for builders - albeit better for those in the South -east. By December the RICS was reporting the strongest expectations of price growth for 14 years, with fears by this point centring on whether government measures had turned a recovery into a bubble.

The past year has also seen major completions, largely in London. Topping out events were held for the Crick Institute in King鈥檚 Cross, and the Cheesegrater and Walkie Talkie towers in the City. Even more encouragingly, work began on major schemes, such as the huge project to redevelop Battersea Power Station and the surrounding area, and the mixed-use One Blackfriars project.

好色先生TV鈥檚 Family 好色先生TVletter

Well, what a year it has been for the construction family!!! It鈥檚 safe to say that 2013 didn鈥檛 start well for us, but since then things have got a lot better and we鈥檙e now actually looking forward to a prosperous year ahead. Who would have thought?!

As I鈥檓 sure you already know, Jimmy鈥檚 little housing business took off in the spring and has been going from strength to strength. We鈥檙e so pleased for him! It鈥檚 been a tough time for Jimmy but he鈥檚 always said that constricted supply would eventually lead back to price inflation when looked at from a macroeconomic perspective - he鈥檚 such a wag! And at least now those horrible bankers are being a LITTLE bit more understanding!!!

Anita鈥檚 building firm is also on the up, but it鈥檚 been a hard slog. We鈥檙e still worried about her body image - she needs to accept that while small, her bottom line is perfectly formed - but overall it鈥檚 been AGES since she seemed so happy.

Then there鈥檚 Tony. Ah, sweet lovely creative Tony. He鈥檚 still eccentric (!) but his designs seem to have come down to earth in a big way. Hospitals in the shape of whirligigs and houses made to look like desiccated aubergines??!! What was he thinking?!! These days he鈥檚 experimenting with what he calls 鈥渇unctionality鈥 - no, we鈥檝e got no idea what he means either!

And of course, Tiny BIM continues to grow and prosper, although he鈥檚 still far smaller than comparable IT technologies of his age. And he did suffer a crisis of confidence late in the year when a mean old lawyer had a go at him - why is it ALWAYS the lawyers?!!! - and told him he wasn鈥檛 all he was cracked up to be. AS IF!!!

Anyway, enough from us. The 好色先生TV family will be back next year with so much more to tell 鈥

2013 was host to some spectacular successes. You can find out our top 10 rundown with our Christmas . Alternatively, you can have a look at what we consider the biggest of the year鈥

It was a dramatic year for others. It wouldn鈥檛 be Christmas without some in the industry. We said hello to some , and to others. There were some high-profile step-downs; we round up the highlights with our feature.

And of course, it wouldn鈥檛 be Christmas without 鈥 Some of the best presents are in our list here, but of course there鈥檚 the odd 鈥

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