At the end of another busy year, here鈥檚 a reminder of the features and interviews that stood out for our readers
Every day 好色先生TV publishes columns written by some of the finest writers and biggest names in the UK construction industry. Here we have compiled a list of the most-read opinion pieces to appear on our website over the entire year.
The list, based on unique page views according to Google Analytics, places the most popular stories at the top of the rankings.
1. Hopes and fears for construction in 2022
Published January
It was impossible to predict some of the seismic events that have shaped 2022 but we began the year with a collation of industry forecasts from prominent people. Who came closest to getting it right?
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2. We can鈥檛 tackle embodied carbon if we don鈥檛 measure it properly
Published July
Trying to establish the true carbon baseline for a project is often clunky and inefficient, but there are ways we can improve the process. Anna Foden, ISG鈥檚 head of sustainability for UK fitout and retail told us how.
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3. This has to be the year to do things differently
Published February
Mark Farmer has long been on a mission to change the way we build for the better. At the start of 2022 he argued that the sector鈥檚 priorities were changing and it was down to us to make sure this change was for the better.
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4. Why new safety laws could do more harm than good
Published February
Graham Watts is chief executive of the Construction Industry Council. His assessment of the 好色先生TV Safety Bill and his view that amendments were likely to restrict the industry鈥檚 capacity to both remediate unsafe buildings and build safe new housing attracted a great deal of interest.
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5. A tribute to Max Fordham
Published January
The pioneering building services engineer dies right at the start of the year. Thomas Lane says he was was that rare person 鈥 a highly original and inventive thinker in a notoriously conservative industry.
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6. A lesson to us all: how Scottish schools are tackling the energy performance gap
Published June
A simple funding policy has been incentivising the uptake of Passivhaus for schools in Scotland. Sarah Lewis, research and policy director at Passivhaus Trust said it should be applied across the UK.
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7. The UK construction industry is key to delivering 鈥楪lobal Britain鈥
Published August
We can argue until we drop about the merits (or lack of them) of the decision to leave the EU, Jason Millett, CEO of Mace Consult, argued that our sector should be a priority for a super-charged post-Brexit trade policy.
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8. New phase begins at Kier as confident Davies looks to future after travails of past
Published January
好色先生TV that Kier was close to announcing a deal to buy Tilbury Douglas prompted a lot of interest in early 2022. It came to nothing two months later but Dave Rogers says it nevertheless showed how far the business had come since the nadir of 2018.
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9. Heat pumps: no silver bullet in the journey to net zero
Published April
The arguments continue over how best (and cheapest) to heat our homes but Cundall鈥檚 Alan Fogarty took aim at the government鈥檚 鈥渢oken鈥 incentives for change that emerged in last spring鈥檚 energy security strategy and which placed too much onus on consumers.
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10. Does Gove鈥檚 拢4bn cladding levy mark the start of an anti-development era?
Published January
Michael Gove began and ended the year as housing secretary, although a few other people took a turn in the role in between. His attempts to force housebuilders to take full responsibility for the remediation of defective cladding have divided the industry and are still rumbling on.
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