More Focus – Page 334

  • London Zoo’s Komodo Dragon House boasts a 300 m2 green roof, erected in 2004 by Miller Roofing using Sarnafil products, and based on biodiversity principles developed in Switzerland
    Features

    Sustainability: Green roofs

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Living roofs are often specified for their symbolic value, as a statement of the owner or developer's environmental credentials. But, as Simon Rawlinson of Davis Langdon explains, there are also tangible cost and performance benefits to going green up top

  • Features

    Skanska enjoys £1bn month as Barts gets go-ahead

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Swedish firm tops monthly league thanks to £1.2bn PFI hospital scheme

  • Steve McGuckin
    Features

    ‘Be careful what you say. If you claim to have done something, I'll check it'

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Land Securities, aka the builder's developer, is spending £700m a year. But you won't win any of it if you're what development director Steve McGuckin delicately terms a bullshitter. Katie Puckett found out about his plans to take even tighter control.

  • Tony Birkbeck
    Features

    Prater learns from rival's fall

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    SME focus - Two months after buying most of Coverite, the roofer is still cautious over expansion

  • The roof undulates over the visitor centre
    Features

    Bespoke Savill style

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    An elegant visitor centre with a timber gridshell roof cuts a swath through Windsor Great Park

  • Geoff Wright
    Features

    Geoff Wright takes a bow

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Hammerson boss retires today after 37 years and hints at future industry roles

  • Olkiluoto 3 under construction. It will join two existing plants and a wind turbine.
    Features

    Nuclear power station in Olkiluoto, Finland: The 1.6 billion watt baby

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    320,000 m³ of granite blasted away, 12,000 m³ of concrete poured in one go: the team building Europe's first nuclear reactor in a decade aren't messing around. Still, the most complicated thing is the paperwork. Thomas Lane reports from Finland

  • Suffolk’s Sizewell B
    Features

    Sizewell stories

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    We can also learn a lot from the last reactor built in Britain, Suffolk's Sizewell B. Here, key members of the project team share their memories with Graham Ridout

  • Features

    Five ways to spot a sinking ship

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Why are your directors always having meetings? Why is everyone so angry? And why has the boss just moved the sofa out of his office? Mark Leftly explains how to spot if your firm is heading for the rocks

  • Features

    Impress your boss - Women's loos and regs

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    A bluffer's guide to ... Women's loos and regs

  • Features

    Places to be - July and beyond

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Your monthly guide to all the best networking events, parties and essential industry seminars

  • Features

    Appointments

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    This week's career movers ...

  • The library’s copper-clad performance centre protrudes from the main building
    Features

    Centre of learning

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    The successful design and construction of Oldham's library and lifelong learning centre could teach other PFI consortiums a thing or two

  • A model showing how Sheffield University’s Learning Resource Centre will look when finished
    Features

    Touching the void

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    If you thought concrete had to be heavy then you've clearly never used the latest void forming systems, reports Roger Northam of Cobiax Technologies

  • Features

    Carbon trading

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Timber homes might have less embodied CO2 than than those buit from concrete. But new research shows that over their lifetime, concrete homes win the carbon battle hands down. By Jeff Dyson of The Concrete Centre

  • Concrete was used to great effect at Manchester Ravensbury Community Primary School
    Features

    A class of its own

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    Concrete's thermal efficiency and adaptability means it's not only well placed to deliver the government's school construction and refurbishment programme, it can do so sustainably, says The Concrete Centre's Andrew Minson

  • Features

    Solid as a rock

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    An unfortunate side effect of the increasing use of lighter, longer floor spans is vibration, a particular problem in buidings such as hospitals. But as The Concrete Centre’s Andrew Minson reports, this doesn’t have to be a problem

  • The concrete blocks forming the labyrinth provide thermal mass
    Features

    Playing it cool

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    The first glasshouse to be built at Kew in almost 20 years is not designed to keep heat in – quite the opposite in fact. Which is why concrete proved to be as vital a component as glass.

  • Features

    Construction lessons

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    A new prestressed slab product has helped to deliver quality student accommodation at a West Country university within a tight deadline, reports George Tootell, special projects director at Buchan Concrete Solutions

  • Eurocode 2
    Features

    Cracking the code

    2006-06-30T00:00:00Z

    The British Standard for the structural use of concrete is to be replaced with Eurocode 2 in March 2008. But there’s no need to worry, says The Concrete Centre’s Charles Goodchild