All ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV Analysis articles – Page 11
-
Features
Do priority schools add up?
The picture emerging from some of the few completed priority schools is one of cut-price, smaller buildings with potentially higher long-term maintenance costs
-
Features
UKIP: The vocal minority
Control immigration and large areas of British countryside will not need to be destroyed by housebuilding, says UKIP. Nationalist populism at its most simplistic, perhaps, but the party’s anti-development stance is bearing down on politics at a local level
-
Features
Apprentices in construction: One step forward…
For construction to exploit the economic recovery, it will need about 30,000 new skilled workers each year - that’s about double the number of apprentices the industry is training up
-
Features
Behind the hype: Sustainable new homes
New research is casting further doubt on long-held claims that a new-build property is necessarily cheaper to run than a refurbished Victorian home
-
Features
Architecture: The diversity problem
An architectural education will last seven years and leave you with debts in excess of £50,000. So is it becoming a pastime exclusively for the rich?
-
Features
Prepare to be boarded
With the recession over, rising turnover and damaged valuations have left construction firms in a climate perfect for acquisition deals. Are you in a position to grow your business or is it time to sell up?
-
Features
Why we're backing Agenda 15
Our Agenda 15 campaign manifesto sets to influence the next government by setting out what construction needs to thrive. Here’s why some of those who have signed up to support it think this initiative is so important
-
Features
No man’s land: Unwanted supermarket sites
Supermarkets are responding to the UK’s shift in shopping habits by massively cutting back their development programmes, leaving the construction industry and affected communities wondering what will happen to the unwanted sites
-
Features
A manifesto for construction
Our Agenda 15 campaign aims to influence the next government by telling politicians what construction needs to thrive. Here, we explain the manifesto aims and how you can support them
-
Features
Predictions for 2015: Philippe Honnorat
WSP’s UK head of building services on what the next 12 months have in store
-
Features
Predictions for 2015: Alan Brown
Cala’s chief executive officer reveals what he’s expecting from 2015
-
Features
Predictions for 2015: James Pellatt
Great Portland Estates’ head of projects looks at 2015 from a client perspective
-
Features
Predictions for 2015: Jack Pringle
Pringle Brandon Perkins + Will’s principal and managing director forecasts 2015
-
Features
Predictions for 2015: Mark Reynolds
Mace’s chief executive predicts what 2015 could have in store for contractors and the wider sector
-
Features
Calling time on the coalition
From the Green Deal to Crossrail, the government made a number of pledges back in 2010 to keep the industry afloat during the grim five years ahead. But how well has it stuck to them?
-
Features
Housebuilders' salary survey 2014: Paying the price
New research into the housebuilding industry shows that although staff are enjoying higher salaries, they’re also taking on more responsibilities, working longer hours and finding their work/life balance out of kilter.
-
Features
Is the north on the up?
George Osborne talks of a creating a ‘northern powerhouse’ but how much faith should the industry put in Westminster’s affirmations?
-
Features
Reviewing the Lyons Review
The Lyons Review sets out a routemap to the construction of 200,000 homes a year, so what do private housebuilders and affordable housing landlords make of it?
-
Features
Always read the label: Home performance labelling
The amount of consumer information for home buyers is pitiful, but now a pilot project will test what better home performance labelling might look like in practice
-
Features
Procurement on trial
Construction firms are increasingly emboldened to take the government to court over its procurement decisions, but who’s to blame?