Archive for September, 2007

28 Sep 2007

DELIVERING URBAN DESIGN

Billed as the first complete guide to the process of creating successful sustainable places, the new Urban Design Compendium 2 is officially approved by the UK’s two most powerful regeneration agencies - soon to become one - the Housing Corporation and English Partnerships.

Launched last week, with its own supporting interactive web version, the new urban design bible is presented as the successor to the seven year-old Urban Design Compendium, but with an emphasis on project deliver. Accordingly the steps to success are concerned more with design management than detailed design solutions; the five key steps are entitled commitment and leadership, integrated approach, adding value, working collaboratively, and legacy and management.

UDC2 also identifies the main barriers to good urban design, presenting a range of exemplar schemes as examples of how to overcome them.

The new guide can also be read as a supporting document to the Corporation’s new Design and Quality standards which will apply to all schemes in its forthcoming 2008-11 investment programme.

‘The first Urban Design Compendium transformed our understanding of what constitutes good urban design,’ said Trevor Beattie, English Partnerships’ Director of Corporate Strategy. ‘Seven years and 25,000 copies later we need the same transformation in our approach to delivery. Urban Design Compendium 2 is the first complete guide to the process of creating successful sustainable places. It is a practical manual for project delivery and its impact will be measured in the quality of places it inspires.

More information

Source: RIBA Practice Bulletin No. 415 (27 September 2007)

27 Sep 2007

Recycle Community – receive recyclable building products free of charge!

The Green Register recently met Paul Hambridge, the Managing Director of a new initiative called Recycle Community, and think his idea for reducing building waste is a brilliant one! 

Every building site produces waste material which can be reused for other projects, however at present the common practice is to dump the waste material in landfill sites or deliver it to reprocessing plants. 

On the Recycle Community website you can join as a supplier and post details of building materials you have available for recycling, or you can register as a customer and view those listings of building materials. 

take a look  If you’ve got any questions you can contact Paul by email at paul@recycle-community.com

26 Sep 2007

Plans approved for showcase sustainable building

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Planning permission was successfully achieved yesterday for the new 1,716m2 Regional Agricultural Centre on the site of the long established and recognised Great Yorkshire Showground in Harrogate. 

Plans submitted on behalf of the Yorkshire Agricultural Society were previously rejected by Harrogate Borough Council and subsequently revised by P+HS to address concerns over traffic flow and sustainability. New proposals include an innovative design strategy which incorporates sustainable principles, creating a showcase building with minimised impact on the environment.  The new building, on the south side of the 250 acre showground comprises a total of 865m2 of office space, a farm shop of 710m2 (of which 267m2 is retail space) plus an 80 seater café (141m2). There will also be 43 car parking spaces. 

25 Sep 2007

Royston Life Long Learning Centre

Works Begins September 2007

Royston Life Long Learning centre. A two storey steel frame building, sited within Royston Civic Campus.  The scheme will provide library, CIS, café, sessional day care and adult learning facilities, as well as hireable meeting spaces for the local community.

The project will be run under a JCT Standard form of contract 2005, P+HS are acting as contract administrators for the project. The main contractor  is ISG Totty and the Client is Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council.  The contract value is £1.6m and has been partially funded by European Union Objective 1 and Yorkshire Forward. The scheme is due for completion in May 2008.

21 Sep 2007

Washington Primary Care Centre

Washington PCC

Work has started on the new Washington Primary Care Centre. This is the second PCC that P+HS have designed for Sunderland Teaching Primary Care Trust. The piles and pile caps are complete and erection of the steel frame is underway [approx 50% complete]. The concrete first and second floors are programmed to commence on 1st October. This photograph was taken from the raised pedestrian walkway at the north-west corner of the site.

The project is being delivered under the P21 procurement method.

Contractor/PSCP: Laing O’Rourke.

Contract Value: £9.2m [GMP]

Completion Date: August 2008.

21 Sep 2007

HSE toolbox talks

Although I am sure we are all now familiar with the new ACOP and the CDM 2007 Industry Guide for Designers - CITB referred to previously,

I was pleased to see that the HSE have now introduced the following toolbox talks (ppt) which are quite useful:
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 1 - Overview
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 2 - Clients
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 3 - CDM co-ordinator
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 4 - Designers
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 5 - Principal contractors & contractors
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 6 - Site health and safety
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 7 - Competence & Training
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 8 - Worker engagement & communication
·  CDM 2007 Training Package - Session 9 - Summary & Where Next

Web link here

20 Sep 2007

John Rylands Library re-opens, Deansgate Manchester

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20 Sep 2007

Court Barton, Clifford nears completion.

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  The four new builds at Court Barton are near to completion. Photographs below show Plot 1 external and internal views and external view of Plot 4.  All are due for completion by the middle of November.

20 Sep 2007

Plot 1 Internal view from gallery

Plot 1, Court Barton

20 Sep 2007

Plot 4, View from rear garden

Plot 4, Court Barton

20 Sep 2007

Civil Justice Centre, Manchester

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20 Sep 2007

LATEST ROLE FOR CABE - HOUSING AUDITOR

CABE is to be named as the official affordable housing quality audit body for England and will begin a programme of assessing the design quality of an ‘extensive sample’ of homes funded by the Housing Corporation.

Corporation chief executive Steve Douglas was due to announce the news at the National Housing Federation Conference this week. The Corporation has entered into a service agreement with CABE to audit the National Affordable Housing Programme where homes are being developed through its partnership funding route.

The move is meant to bolster the Corporation’s new Design and Quality Strategy standards. The Corporation adds that the focus will be on the external environment, rather than internal design or environmental performance, using the Building for Life assessment process.

19 Sep 2007

Bauhaus: 1919-1933 MIMA Middlesbrough

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mima presents the most significant Bauhaus exhibition in the UK for 30 years, focusing on the ethos of the Bauhaus School between 1919 and 1933. The show includes works by Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky and Josef Albers, film works by Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, architectural models, design, applied art, furniture and a specially commissioned wall drawing.

Language of Visionshowcases works by contemporary artists whose practice has a relationship to the legacy of the Bauhaus. Artists include Markus Amm, Camilla Low, Toby Paterson, Ryan Gander, Lothar Gotz and Andrew Miller.

A series of photographs by Hans Engels, presents the original Bauhaus architecture, constructed by the masters and students of the Bauhaus between 1919 and 1933, in its present condition.

Bauhaus Reviewed 1919-1933, is presented in mima’s Sound Space on the Third Floor Roof Terrace. The selection of recordings from the early 20th century goes deep into the myths surrounding the Bauhaus school and the artists it gave birth to.

The exhibition is part of NorthEast England’s programme of world-class festival and events for 2007, managed by culture10 based at NewcastleGateshead Initiative.

For dates, check MIMA

Sponsored by Barker & Stonehouse.

14 Sep 2007

Mater Dei Hospital Main Entrance Mall

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14 Sep 2007

Mater Dei Hospital Malta

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Mater Dei Hospital is a new acute hospital on Malta. When completed the new hospital project will have a total floor area of 232,000m² and approximately 8,000 rooms. The hospital will also be used as a teaching facility by the neighbouring University of Malta.

Resources in Malta have always been scarce, which is why environmental considerations have played a key role in the development of the Mater Dei Hospital.

In keeping with the environmental considerations, which have played such a role in the hospital’s development, this will be the first building in Malta with insulated external walls and with high performance glass in the windows. These will reduce cooling costs between April and November and heating costs during the other months.

Rainwater will be collected, stored and used for irrigation. Low flush toilets and environmentally adapted refrigerants will be used as well as polypropylene (PP) piping. In addition, there will be an effort to reduce electromagnetic fields at the hospital by various means.

Construction waste will be separated at source so the Maltese authorities can arrange further recycling. Preparations will be made for the recycling of topsoil from excavation work, as well as stones from the demolition of stone walls.

During the construction, trees that would have normally been cut down have instead been moved and re-planted at other sites. Rubble walls and buildings of cultural heritage value have been moved and rebuilt in a safe environment. As many as ten different kinds of waste are being sorted and recycled. Excavated material is partly used on site as road base and surplus material is used to refill an excavated quarry, which will later be used as an orange plantation.

The Mater Dei hospital is set to have air conditioning in every room and that is what will take the biggest toll on Malta’s energy bill. A spokesperson for the Foundation for Medical Service confirmed that, “each and every room of the hospital will be air conditioned as well as certain plant areas. Other areas such as corridors and service areas will be air-conditioned indirectly or not at all.”

It also seems that while those who planned and approved the hospital development did consider energy saving, renewable sources of energy were not considered, although solar power could apparently cut the emissions and energy bill considerably.

The Foundation’s spokesperson said: “No solar or renewable power use is envisaged but the design includes energy saving features such as: double glazing and UV blocks on windows; use of variable speed drives; heat recovery from chillers and air handling units; use of condensation from air-handling units; electronic ballasts on fluorescent lighting fixtures; a building automation system and other features.”

Help from the UK

The senior planning team from James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough has been helping with the migration plan [arranged by the Department of Health’s International Consultancy Division], moving all the staff, patients, equipment and furniture from the old St Luke’s Hospital across to Mater Dei. JCUH is a similar size and has recently been the subject of a similar move, so the expertise is really valuable. Middlesbrough is also a similar size in population terms to Malta at around 400,000; the climate is not similar!

P+HS opportunities

Chris P has been out in Malta at the invitation of the Maltese Government’s Foundation for Medical Service to look at the new hospital and discuss the possibility of working together on a new 200 bed rehabilitation hospital, and the redevelopment of their primary care estate.