Astronomical overruns, delays, endless design changes, and a Scottish executive inquiry: the Holyrood parliament building in Edinburgh is arguably the most disastrous construction project Britain has seen for a long time. The project team got a pasting in the Scottish media after it emerged in June that the cost had jumped 拢37m to 拢375m. Bovis Lend Lease, the construction manager, cost consultant Davis Langdon & Everest and architects RMJM and RMBT were pinned to the wall, then brutally fee-capped. Worse was to come. This autumn, it emerged that RMJM had issued hundreds of design changes a month and that the price had risen to 拢400m. Enter Lord Fraser and his public inquiry, which is making ever more embarrassing revelations while further design changes are still being proposed. The latest estimate for a completion date is July.
Second-placed cock-up of the year is Bath Spa, Sir Nicholas Grimshaw's glass-and-stone sanctuary.
The scheme doubled in cost, was 15 months late, and provided the material for big fight between the council, the architect and contractor Mowlem. And an honourable mention must go to Saga HQ, Sir Michael Hopkins' 拢20m project. Built in 1999, it required work to rectify draughts and leaks. The repairs are expected to cost 拢8m, and m'learned friends have been informed.
2 Megaschemes
Big was best for British construction in 2003. Three ambitious multibillion-pound projects 鈥 the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, Wembley stadium and Heathrow Terminal 5 鈥 topped the news this year.
T5 snatched the headlines in January with Laing O'Rourke's groundbreaking pay deal with unions UCATT, GMB and the T&G. Skilled workers secured 拢55,000 a year, and the unskilled 拢32,000. Companies across the South-east feared having to offer similar amounts, and T5's M&E workers began to agitate for a similar deal 鈥 which has just been agreed at 拢50,000 a year.
CTRL incurred public wrath when a 10 m deep hole opened up near its tunnelling works in east London after a boring machine disturbed a network of 19th-century wells. Work halted for two months and aggrieved locals claimed compensation. But the 拢5.2bn project is still on track to complete in 2007.
Public safety fears were raised during the construction of Wembley stadium, with police called in to check the foundations for bombs before they were completed. Explosives could have been planted with the intention of detonating them at a sporting event once the project is finished and open to the public, 好色先生TV discovered. The Metropolitan Police gave the foundations a clean bill of health and construction is continuing.
3 Iraq war and its aftermath
The USA and UK launched military action to unseat Saddam Hussein in March, amid industry speculation over how many reconstruction contracts those greedy Yanks would hand over to UK companies. Not many, it turned out, but few tears were shed for lost opportunities as contractors declared Iraq too unsafe to send their people there. About 1000 construction workers did go to the Gulf 鈥 as part of the call-up of army reservists. Some companies were left short of staff, and the Construction Confederation issued guidelines on how to rejig projects and responsibilities to handle the disruption.
Wartime fears that the government's military spending would require cuts in public spending 鈥 and hence in PFI projects 鈥 have not been borne out so far. But there have been other, indirect effects: terrorist attacks in several countries since the war have led contractors to withdraw staff and tighten security; and British embassies around the world are getting anti-terrorist refurbishments. That hasn't put off consulting engineer Halcrow, which is leading the British reconstruction efforts and hopes to have a 200-strong division in Iraq by 2006.
4 Off the rails
Safety on the tracks was a huge public concern this year, with rail and Tube safety under scrutiny. Jarvis found itself in the firing line as concerns over its work mounted. Network Rail put the company under pressure to slash its profit margins on rail maintenance by 50%. The company eventually gave up the fight, announcing it was to leave the sector. Network Rail later decided to take all rail maintenance work back in-house 鈥 which was bad news for Amey and Balfour Beatty, which both had contracts.
Jarvis has had other woes, too. Network Rail said the company was to face "repercussions" after it admitted that a maintenance oversight could have caused a derailment at King's Cross in September. Paris Moayedi was appointed chairman in May but decided it the game wasn't worth the candle, and quit in November. Where now for Jarvis? Maybe London Conservative mayoral candidate Steven Norris can improve matters in the new year.
In January, 好色先生TV predicted that Tube Lines, the PPP consortium on the Jubilee, Northern and Piccadilly lines, would enjoy bumper profits. According to chief executive Terry Morgan, its three members could make 拢256m in the first seven and a half years of their contract, or 拢80m more than first forecast. But after a series of derailments, safety incidents and a drop in public confidence, not to mention threats of strikes over safety from the unions, we're guessing they're not feeling so optimistic at the year's end.
5 The bigger they are, the harder they fall
This year saw some of construction's biggest names struggling for survival 鈥 and in some cases losing.
Amey started the year in a pitiful state, and speculation was rife that the group was on the verge of collapse. In the end it was saved by its sale to Spanish contractor Ferrovial for 拢81m.
Ballast was not so lucky, going into administration after its Dutch parent, Ballast Nedam, cut off financial support. Nearly 1000 jobs were lost.
(For more on Ballast and Amey, see "Big deals".) 6 Political animals
Construction suffered a Whitehall demotion in 2003, from having a minister of its own to being part of a broader portfolio. Energy and construction minister Brian Wilson was replaced by lower-ranking minister Nigel Griffiths in June, who got the newly created title of minister for small business and enterprise.
But Griffiths didn't let his broad role stop him from mucking in. After promising to champion construction and hitting out at the Scottish parliament fiasco, he launched a body to give the industry more say in the provision of 拢400m of training funds.
And John Prescott hasn't been putting his feet up, either. He put a lot of new work our way with his big regeneration spending, which was set out in the Communities Plan. Prescott aims to devote 拢22bn over the next three years to tackle Britain's housing crisis.
The money will be spent on, among other things, PFI housing schemes and pathfinder schemes to reduce derelict housing stock.
7 London's 2012 Olympics bid
London is to compete for the 2012 Olympics, and that means there's an awful lot of construction work up for grabs.
Masterplanner EDAW and architect HOK Sport were first off the blocks, picking up the 拢1m masterplanning contract. Now more than ever, pressure is on the government to commission Crossrail, without which transport experts warn the east of London could not cope with the Olympics crowds.
But some of the money to fund the 拢250m games' bid could be diverted from existing projects, with a 25% cut in the London Development Agency's funding for Thames Gateway regeneration on the cards.
And there are already problems on the horizon. Construction's skills shortage could scupper the bid, according to Construction Industry Council chief executive and former Olympic competitor Graham Watts. He called upon the government to use the bid as a platform to attract new blood into the industry.
8 Transfer season
There were some big moves this year. Skanska was "not best pleased" when senior vice-president Keith Clarke departed to become chief executive of Atkins in June. The 51-year-old will be charged with putting the firm back on track after an eventful nine months at Atkins saw a catastrophic IT systems failure, a profit warning, 400 redundancies and the undignified departure of chief executive Robin Southwell.
Ken Shuttleworth left Foster and Partners in November, after 29 years with the practice. In an interview with 好色先生TV in January, Shuttleworth emerged as the penman behind Foster triumphs such as the Swiss Re and the GLA building. Reports of a rift with Norman Foster followed rapidly after publication. Shuttleworth will now be setting up on his own, after a move to Hamilton Associates fell through.
And just a couple of weeks ago, London's Conservative Party mayoral candidate Steven Norris controversially took the top job at Jarvis after Paris Moayedi quit. The question is: can Norris can improve the company's reputation and please the voters at the same time? 9 Libeskind's World Trade Centre win
The competition to rebuild New York's World Trade Centre was won by architect Daniel Libeskind in March. Much of the project will be completed in just four years, he told 好色先生TV.
The design is highly symbolic. The 30 ft high slurry walls of the excavated site are to be retained as a giant memorial to the 2800 people who died on 11 September 2001. The foundations of the two towers will also be marked on the site, and a 1776 ft spire soaring over the angular glass buildings represents the year of America's independence.
10 RICS rows
In its drive to become the world's foremost surveyors' institution, the RICS irked members who felt its attention should be directed closer to home. A vote to raise subscription levels by one-third was the last straw. Open warfare broke out, with the UK's nine largest project management companies claiming they weren't getting value for money. A group of rebels launched a bid for an extraordinary general meeting to rescind the fees hike. President Peter Fall argued that most members didn't oppose the raise, saying: "The vote has been taken and it seems pointless to do the whole thing again." Fierce battles on 好色先生TV's letters page culminated in the establishment of the Quantity Surveyors' Institution in October. The organisation will get 1000 members this year and hopes to have 6000 in five years, according to its founder Roger Knowles.
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Review of the year - 2003
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