All Steel articles – Page 2
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ɫTV
Steel boss says UK recovery remains 'distant prospect'
Severfield-Rowen CEO Tom Haughey says group is focusing on industrial, infrastructure and commercial sectors
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ɫTV
Tata Steel to cut 1,500 jobs in UK as steel demand drops
Demand currently at two-thirds of 2007 level
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ɫTV
Severfield-Rowen orders holding up in choppy waters
Structures specialist forecasts a “very tough” 2011 with demand at relatively low levels
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ɫTV
Severfield pushes back recovery hopes to 2012
Steel specialist’s pre-tax profts fell by 70%, and directors expect the tough climate to continue into 2011
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Features
Specialist costs: Steel and concrete
Steel and concrete subcontractor turnovers have taken a double hit as the price of raw materials has surged and work dried up. Despite no improvement to the short-term outlook, Peter Fordham of Davis Langdon, an Aecom company, sees a glimmer of hope from 2013
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ɫTV
Billington boss believes steel market has ‘reached bottom’
Billington chief executive Steve Fareham says markets are improving and the cycle is turning
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ɫTV
Steel price goes up
Indian multinational materials giant Tata is to raise the price of structural steel by £95 per tonne in March because of concerns over rising coal prices. The new price will take effect on all deliveries from Sunday 6 March 2011.
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ɫTV
Yorkon uses vintage methods of construction for Tesco
Offsite specialist re-creates sixties-style supermarket at Goodwood Park in Sussex
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ɫTV
Saved steel frame factory shipped to UK
Fusion ɫTV Systems entire factory is being shipped from Cork to Northampton after it was acquired by private equity
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ɫTV
John Dodds joins Severfield-Rowen board
John Dodds joins Severfield-Rowen as the firm predicts more steel companies hitting the wall.
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Features
Kazakhstan: ɫTV the world's largest tent
In the capital of Kazakhstan, Buro Happold, Foster + Partners and developer Sembol have built the world’s largest tent. And their heroic attempts to heave that 90m mast upright are enough to make fair-weather campers weep
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ɫTV
Infinity Bridge wins steel award
Stockton-on-Tees’ Infinity Footbridge was one of four projects to scoop gongs at last week’s Structural Steel Design Awards
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Features
2012 countdown: The aquatics centre
Since the aquatics centre’s 160m-long roof was lowered into place last year, work on the Zaha Hadid-designed venue has continued to power ahead
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Features
2012 countdown: The stadium
One year from now, the 80,000-seat Olympic stadium has to be ready. Will it make it?
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Features
Aldar’s Abu Dhabi HQ: One last spin of the wheel
Aldar’s Abu Dhabi headquarters is one of the final feats of jaw-dropping construction machismo we’ll see from the UAE for a while, says Thomas Lane. And it gives us plenty of reasons to mourn their passing …
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Features
Sands of time: Foster's shell roof
Novum Structures had just four months to build this complex shell roof structure - part of Foster + Partners’ sand-dune inspired pavilion for the Shanghai 2010 Expo. So how did they do it?
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Features
Support act: Cannon Place
Finding somewhere to lay the foundations for an office block above London’s Cannon Street station proved so difficult, the engineers had to call on the structural principles of the Forth Bridge to get the job done
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Features
Beyond the pale: Renzo Piano's Central St Giles
Controversial it may be, but Central St Giles has cheered up an obscure corner of London with a riot of reds, yellows, greens and oranges – making the rest of the capital look a tad grey.
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Features
Double crossing: Heneghan Peng’s Olympic bridge
Heneghan Peng’s 54m-wide central bridge at the Olympic park, which was lowered into place last week, has been ingeniously designed to form two narrower walkways after the Games have finished. Stephen Kennett explains how it all works
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