December 15, 2016

Green spaces will ease flood risk

A £2 million investment in four sustainable drainage projects (SUDS) in Sheffield will create wildlife habitats for community enjoyment. The schemes will also remove 90,000 cubic metres of run off rainwater from the city’s sewers – the equivalent of nearly 10 million toilet flushes, 2.5 million showers or 1.25 million

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One day mortgage valuations launch at Skipton

One day mortgage valuations launch at Skipton Skipton Intermediaries has announced today that it is launching day one mortgage valuations across all of its applications. The move follows a trial which found a reduction of up to four days in the application to offer wait time. In addition to this,

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MP calls on more people to join the construction industry

Jim Cunningham, MP for Coventry South, visited a local building site last week (Friday 17th June) as part of week-long campaign to get more people into the construction industry .Mr Cunningham visited a new accommodation development at Warwick University during Open Doors 2016, a joint initiative between the Construction Industry Training

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Something is not right in physical oil

Supply disruptions are not enough to create a really out of control bull market, says John Dizard ©Bloomberg The pleasure is momentary, the position ridiculous, and the expense damnable. Attributed to Philip Stanhope,fourth Earl of Chesterfield, 1694-1773 More On this story On this topic View from the US Something is

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SES wins £43m M&E package at defence rehab centre

Main contractor Interserve has handed SES Engineering Services a £43m mechanical & electrical subcontract on the new £300m Defence & National Rehabilitation Centre (DNRC). Above: Artists impression of the DNRC at Stanford Hall The new clinical facility is being built for the armed forces at the Stanford Hall estate near

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Wienerberger Continues Its Product Innovation

Following a growing demand for the Rivius slate range, Wienerberger has continued its product innovation with the development of a new colour to replicate Heather Slate – a product that holds the aesthetic beauty of slate, whilst featuring key benefits of clay such as being fast and inexpensive to lay.

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Lord Heseltine launches the Tees Valley industrial strategy

Lord Heseltine returned to the Tees Valley today to launch a new Strategic Economic Plan, placing the region at the centre of a new approach to industrial strategy. Meeting in Darlington, Lord Heseltine was joined by 250 business leaders, and the leaders of the five councils, to reaffirm commitment to

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Issue 324 : Jan 2025

December 15, 2016

Green spaces will ease flood risk

A £2 million investment in four sustainable drainage projects (SUDS) in Sheffield will create wildlife habitats for community enjoyment. The schemes will also remove 90,000 cubic metres of run off rainwater from the city’s sewers – the equivalent of nearly 10 million toilet flushes, 2.5 million showers or 1.25 million loads of washing. This will help provide far better protection against the kind of flooding seen in the UK over recent years due to sudden, heavy downpours and prolonged wet weather. The initiative is being largely funded by Sheffield Housing Company (SHC) in connection with the development of 771 new homes in the first three phases of a £250 million building programme. SHC is an innovative joint venture housing company with Sheffield Council, Keepmoat and Great Places Housing Group as its partners. The first of the projects, which is already underway, is at Parson Cross Park, adjacent to the Brearley Forge development.  Here, three basins have been created – one of which will always be wet and suitable for marshland planting and wildlife.  The other two will flood only in wetter weather and could be used as play areas during drier spells. A Pocket Park, below the new Birchlands development on Earl Marshal Road in Fir Vale, will be adapted to manage the surface water before flowing to the Bagley Dike watercourse, which lies underground.  Waste land will be transformed into wetland with associated wildlife. At Manor Top, where approximately 250 new homes are planned, an underground stream will be brought to the surface of a hillside site – providing opportunity for a number of water flow rock features.  In addition, an innovative swale, running beside the new road system, will take run off water and direct it to the basins below.  There may also be permeable paving included here. A wetland biodiversity area will be added to the Pipworth recreation ground, in the lower Manor neighbourhood, with native plants that should attract amphibians and birds. This will help to manage the surface water from a number of construction projects in and around the Harborough Avenue area and will receive funding from other developers. As well as improving the capacity of the sewage system to deal with storms, the schemes will also remove pollutants from the water which drains into them before it flows into local streams, brooks and rivers. John Clephan, Project Director with SHC, said: “The space and quality that our homes provide is very important to us and our customers. However, it is equally important that SHC developments are thoughtfully designed and create environmentally resilient places for Sheffield’s residents to enjoy both now and in the future. “These projects show how the building of new housing is able to create improved amenity green space for residents and wildlife, and at the same time ease the strain on the city’s drainage system.” Since it commenced building three years ago SHC has completed 300 homes around 80% of which have been sold to first time buyers and families.  It has created 31 apprenticeships, 27 new jobs and 42% of people working on the sites are from the city region.   Nearly £7 million has been spent with local supply businesses. Over £50,000 has been pledged to public art and community initiatives; £20,000 has been spent supporting local schools and backing for open pathways to work for students, while university links provide graduates with work experience.  Here has been sponsorship for or attendance at over 20 community events. Looking ahead, the aim is to build up to 2,300 two to six bedroomed properties on 26 sites across the city by 2025 – delivering further economic stimulation, job creation and community investment.  Source link

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One day mortgage valuations launch at Skipton

One day mortgage valuations launch at Skipton Skipton Intermediaries has announced today that it is launching day one mortgage valuations across all of its applications. The move follows a trial which found a reduction of up to four days in the application to offer wait time. In addition to this, Skipton Intermediaries has extended the hours of its e-mortgage service to enable its broker partners to use the online site to submit complete cases up to 10pm. Paul Darwin, Skipton’s Director of Intermediary Relationships, said: “Over the past year we have made substantial, forward thinking developments, motivated by an overwhelming desire to put brokers at the centre of everything we do to improve the speed and efficiency of the service we offer.   We wanted to trial something that would make a difference to our broker partners and we believe the introduction of the day one mortgage valuations and extend online hours has enable us to do that and provide them with a service that best suits their needs.” Source link

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MP calls on more people to join the construction industry

Jim Cunningham, MP for Coventry South, visited a local building site last week (Friday 17th June) as part of week-long campaign to get more people into the construction industry .Mr Cunningham visited a new accommodation development at Warwick University during Open Doors 2016, a joint initiative between the Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) and Build UK. More workers are urgently needed in the industry, as CITB predicts over 230,000 new construction jobs will be created in the UK over the next five years. Jim Cunningham MP said: “I thoroughly enjoyed my visit last week. It just proves how successful and rewarding a career in construction can be. After experiencing Open Doors 2016, I would encourage everyone to consider a career in construction.” Suzannah Nichol, Build UK Chief Executive, said: “I joined the industry after a visit to a local construction site and hopefully Open Doors can get even more young people and others looking for something new to get involved in one of the many careers we have to offer. “Construction is a great place to be and the buzz onsite is infectious. We are so pleased to give Open Doors visitors that same buzz and the chance to see what the industry is all about.” Lorraine Gregory, CITB Partnerships Manager, said: “Open Doors is an excellent way of inspiring more people to consider a career in construction. It is a great opportunity to showcase how rewarding a career in the sector can be. “There is no better time than now, with over 15,000 new construction jobs expected to be created over in the West Midlands over the next five years. “Anyone interested in pursuing a career in construction should visit the industry website – Go Construct.” Source link

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Something is not right in physical oil

Supply disruptions are not enough to create a really out of control bull market, says John Dizard ©Bloomberg The pleasure is momentary, the position ridiculous, and the expense damnable. Attributed to Philip Stanhope,fourth Earl of Chesterfield, 1694-1773 More On this story On this topic View from the US Something is not quite right in the market for what is called physical oil, the stuff stored above ground or aboard ships. Given the structure of the oil price curve, which is pretty flat over the next year, it should not make sense for the commodities investor to take a hedged position in physical oil, particularly oil held in floating storage on ships. Last week there was a 5.1m barrel (MMbbl) reported decline in oil stored in onshore terminals in the US, which led to prices popping up over the $50 mark. This was commonly attributed to the delayed effect of the wildfires in the Canadian oil sands region. Almost everywhere else in the world, though, there was lot of oil being pumped into tankers. That is being done at a damnable expense to producers’ or speculators’ equity. Contrary to election-year rhetoric, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs and the other big banks are not eager to finance oil “cash and carries”. That is, they are not inclined to use up their balance sheets to earn thin profits on secured commodities trades. As one oil trader told me last week: “The market is not respecting fundamentals.” By fundamentals he means that a professional is not supposed to take a position on the future direction of the overall market, but to seek out time and location arbitrages that can be closed without taking on excessive risk. If a trading house is giddy with excitement it might take on some basis risk between different grades of a commodity, but betting on a general price rise or fall . . . not done. Still, there is a momentary pleasure to be had by the speculator in gloating over the paper (or electronic) profits from owning oil since the price levels bottomed out in late January and early February. In contrast to the physical-oil speculators’ apparent surrender to gambling madness, the producers’ capital expenditure is being cut and squeezed as a rational model would suggest. Dollar-denominated junk debt issuance is down to just $7.8bn in the year to date, all of it coming from two national oil companies, Petrobras in Brazil and YPF in Argentina. And US oil production is on an accelerating downward slope as producing fields deplete faster than new wells are drilled and completed. Just as official statistics underestimated the rise in production as the unconventional oil boom played out, so the Energy Information Administration (EIA) is now revising its estimates of future production downward. Bob Brackett, a geologist and senior analyst at Bernstein, the asset manager, has had a good record in estimating US oil production declines this year, which he and his team now put at 690,000 barrels a day (b/d), compared with an EIA estimate of about 500,000. The wildfires in the Canadian oil sands region also gave some cause for optimism among the physical speculators. Now, though, it seems the damage will be largely limited to workers’ housing, which, while individually tragic, can be overcome with quickly manufactured units. The market is also waiting for the rest of the Venezuelan script to play out. The next big drop in exports, of perhaps 300,000b/d, is likely to come from the country’s inability to pay for the imports of light crude needed to dilute its heavy-oil production. All these supply disruptions are not enough to create a true panic and liquidation phase needed to lay the foundation for a really out of control bull market in oil. For that, and for my own guess of a $70 per barrel price within the next year to come true, we need to have a short-term oil price decline pretty soon. There are two groups who think they can win at this game in the medium term. First, there are the managements of national oil companies, who are always in a struggle with other bureaucrats. They have a hard time getting funds appropriated now, but can easily lend themselves the above-ground excess production. The other group is private investors who are building yet more onshore storage tanks. They want to move their oil in floating storage to points closer to where the refiners can take delivery. They think they are location arbitrageurs in the guise of speculators. My own view is that this reflects both the likelihood of a commodities boom over the next year and a half, coupled with a profoundly pessimistic longer-term outlook. Those oil tanks are being built for resale, not for long-term use. Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2016. You may share using our article tools. Please don’t cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web. Source link

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SES wins £43m M&E package at defence rehab centre

Main contractor Interserve has handed SES Engineering Services a £43m mechanical & electrical subcontract on the new £300m Defence & National Rehabilitation Centre (DNRC). Above: Artists impression of the DNRC at Stanford Hall The new clinical facility is being built for the armed forces at the Stanford Hall estate near Loughborough. The DNRC will be operated by the Ministry of Defence and is scheduled to open in 2018. SES director David Mason said: “We have delivered numerous projects with Interserve over many years and have formed an inclusive and collaborative working relationship with them to ensure the delivery of a truly world-class facility. “The project involves highly complex site logistics, based around the refurbishment of the Grade II* listed Stanford Hall with over 20 separate new builds in close proximity and up to 1,000 workers on site at any given time. It also lies in registered parkland where there are numerous restrictions and planning conditions that must be adhered to. All of this requires a managed and considerate approach to the installation of new M&E services. “By using our market-leading off-site manufacturing facilities at SES PRISM extensively on this project, we are able to move as much activity off site as possible meaning that we can make significant time and cost savings as well as create a much safer working environment.” SES is also working with the Career Transition Partnership, which helps to resettle ex-military personnel into new employment roles, to provide employment opportunities to former servicemen and women during the project.     This article was published on 22 Sep 2016 (last updated on 22 Sep 2016). Source link

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Wienerberger Continues Its Product Innovation

Following a growing demand for the Rivius slate range, Wienerberger has continued its product innovation with the development of a new colour to replicate Heather Slate – a product that holds the aesthetic beauty of slate, whilst featuring key benefits of clay such as being fast and inexpensive to lay. Wienerberger says that, as a cost-effective alternative, the new Rivius Heather Slate adds to the range developed by the supplier of wall, roof and landscaping innovations. It features a riven surface and dressed edges, which provides the roof tile with an authentic appearance of a natural slate, whilst being made from natural alluvial clay. The Rivius roof tile was first introduced to the UK market in 2015 and the company says it has proven extremely popular amongst both new and existing customers. It says that, due to the absence of any tough rivets and grading slates, along with no need for drilling, the efficiency of the tile ultimately aids in reducing the time spent roofing a property, whilst developers, and also homeowners alike, reap the benefits of a prem-ium roof at a lower cost. Richard Bishop, category marketing manager for roof at Wienerberger, commented: “Since launching last year, our Rivius roof tile has been very successful – something that was reinforced when it was nominated in the Best New Product category at the 2016 Housebuilder Product Awards. In adding our all-new Rivius Heather Slate to the range, we’re giving our customers even more choice by including an alternative to the popular Antique Slate. “By developing the Rivius roof tile we have been able to extract that premium finish often associated with slate, and combine it with the range of benefits of using clay. We’re very excited by its proven and on-going potential and hope to further develop the range to meet the growing demand for this innovative product.” Article taken from http://rcimag.co.uk/pitched-roofing/clay-leads-way

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Lord Heseltine launches the Tees Valley industrial strategy

Lord Heseltine returned to the Tees Valley today to launch a new Strategic Economic Plan, placing the region at the centre of a new approach to industrial strategy. Meeting in Darlington, Lord Heseltine was joined by 250 business leaders, and the leaders of the five councils, to reaffirm commitment to the economic growth of the Tees Valley, and to use the opportunities arising from devolution to support a bright future for our region. With a £12.3 billion economy and world class expertise in chemicals, energy, health innovation and advanced manufacturing, Tees Valley makes a major contribution to the UK economy.  The Industrial Strategy for Tees Valley 2016–2026 sets out bold plans to create 25,000 additional jobs, by building on our strengths, improving skills and infrastructure, and supporting business growth. The plan sets out key priorities and areas of activity over the next ten years including: Business Growth – attracting new business, improving access to finance and skills, and growing local business through an expanded Business Compass programme. Research, Development, Innovation and Energy – creating centres of innovation and technology, contributing to the UK’s industrial strategy in sectors of expertise; including biologics and materials. Education, Employment and Skills –increasing the number of graduate opportunities and vocational training, improving educational outcomes, and increasing the number of young people in education, employment and training. Place – creating vibrant town centres and expanding the quality and number of new homes. Transport and Infrastructure – plans to improve road, rail and bus services, connect Darlington to HS2, and develop plans for improved East-West connections and an additional Tees Crossing. The Circular Economy – proposals to develop a ‘low cost/high productivity/low carbon’ model for industry in Tees Valley, securing new investment by building clusters of companies connected through supply chains and sustainable energy supplies. Read more at http://neconnected.co.uk/lord-heseltine-launches-tees-valley-industrial-strategy/

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Foremans Hands Over a Sixth Form Centre Building at Top Performing Secondary School

ONE OF THE TOP-PERFORMING SECONDARY SCHOOLS IN ENGLAND CHOOSES A REFURBISHED BUILDING FROM FOREMANS FOR ITS 1ST SIXTH FORM Foremans Relocatable Building Systems, a member of the Portakabin Group and the UK’s largest supplier of refurbished Portakabin buildings, has handed over a purpose-designed sixth form centre at Higham Lane School in Nuneaton, following completion of a £1.6 million contract. Higham Lane is one of the highest-performing state-funded secondary schools in Warwickshire, and is within the top 100 of all secondary schools in England. The new facility is allowing the school to provide a high quality, direct, post-16 progression route for its students for the first time, maintaining standards and outcomes far above national levels. The sixth form centre has been constructed by Foremans using 52 recycled and refurbished Portakabin modules – a fast and highly sustainable building solution. The two-storey building was completed less than six months from receipt of order to be open in time for the school’s first intake of sixth form students. Cranage of the refurbished modular structure was timed for the school holidays to minimise any disruption to teaching. This is Foremans’ 11th school project with education construction consultants Surveyors to Education who were the designers and contract administrators for the scheme. Commenting on the project, Ben Elliott, Director of Corporate Services at Higham Lane School said, “This building is an amazing start to our school year. History has been made as for the first time Higham Lane School is now offering post-16 education from our brand-new sixth form centre. It has been wonderful to see our new sixth formers arrive.” “There is a significant shortage of quality sixth form provision in our area and feedback from our students indicated a strong preference to stay on and study for A-levels at Higham Lane School.” “The centre is both new and modern but in keeping with our existing facilities. Our staff and sixth formers are really delighted to be working and studying in such a high quality learning environment.” The Foremans pre-owned approach gave us significant benefits. “The Foremans pre-owned approach gave us significant benefits – it is very cost effective and the building looks brand new. It gave us more certainty to have the new sixth form up and running in time for the start of the new academic year because the majority of fitting out took place off site. Knowing that Foremans is a member of the Portakabin Group gave us even greater peace of mind along with their excellent relationship with Surveyors to Education.” Martin Hier, Director at Surveyors to Education said, “The school is both a statement building and it blends in well with the existing facilities. It is designed to meet the specific requirements of sixth form learning, which includes teaching spaces to accommodate smaller groups.” “We have a strong and long-standing relationship with the Foremans team and enjoy pushing the boundaries on each education scheme we collaborate on. We take a standard building solution and enhance it to meet the school’s requirements – whether that is for aesthetics or as here, specific classroom sizes.” “We would definitely recommend recycled modular buildings to other schools and colleges. The approach is very sustainable because we are re-using an existing building structure – which is still in perfect condition, and at the same time we can reduce lead times and carbon emissions. Foremans modular buildings are also really flexible so layouts can be reconfigured to meet changing local needs.” The Higham Lane sixth form centre accommodates up to 300 16-19 year-old students and has 17 seminar rooms, an art room, two science laboratories, and common room with café area. Some of the rooms have the flexibility to be divided into two separate rooms for smaller group learning. The building features large amounts of glazing for a high level of natural light, with brick cladding to complement adjacent facilities, and areas of bright red panelling to reflect the school’s colours. Foremans’ 10 previous projects with Surveyors to Education have included a two-storey school complex at Billingbrook School in Northampton and a single-storey community college building with five classrooms and an IT hub at Winstanley College in Wigan.  For further information about refurbished Portakabin buildings, visit www.foremansbuildings.co.uk, email info@foremansbuildings.co.uk, or call 01964 544344.                                       

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