Concrete worker killed by exploding tyre

A concrete supplier has been fined after an agency worker suffered fatal injuries following a tyre explosion.

Dudley Magistrates’ Court heard how the contractor suffered fatal injuries when using an air hose/compressed air to inflate the tyre of an articulated wheel loader.

An HSE investigation into the incident, on 28 March 2019, found that the company failed to have in place a safe system of work for inflation of the multi-piece split rim assembly wheels on the articulated wheel loader.

The compressed air system had not been subject to regular and thorough examination and testing by a competent person.

Anytime Concrete (GB) Ltd of West Bromwich, pleaded guilty to safety breaches and was fined £6,666.00 and ordered to pay costs of £4,522.40.

Speaking after the hearing, HSE inspector Karen Sweeney said: “This tragic incident led to the death of a worker. This could easily have been prevented if the company had acted to identify and manage the risks involved, and to put a safe system of work in place.”

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Hunt starts for developer for £1bn Edinburgh BioQuarter

Edinburgh BioQuarter has formally invited tenders for a private sector partner to expand the site with research buildings and homes.

The opportunity to create a £1bn health innovation district, which will create jobs, homes, and a community for thousands of people in Edinburgh has attracted interest from parties around the world.

BioQuarter is expected to receive £600m of investment, supporting over 4,000 jobs in construction.

Over the lifetime of the 64 acres development site, there is the potential to grow to a health innovation community of 20,000 with 2,500 residential units on site.

EBQ3 Ltd has been formed between the City of Edinburgh Council, regional development agency Scottish Enterprise and the University of Edinburgh to lead the procurement of a private partner for the proposed strategic joint venture partnership.

The public sector-led programme also includes major stakeholders NHS Lothian, a key partner in the innovation ecosystem, which has its two acute hospitals based on site.

The 167-acre site is already home to Edinburgh Medical School and the 900-bed Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh.

It also includes the new home of the Usher Institute for data-driven health and social care innovation, set to open in 2023.

 

Online bidders day

Contracting Authorities are hosting an online bidders event on Tuesday 9 November, from 9-10am.

Edinburgh BioQuarter Health Innovation District

Joint Venture Bidders’ Event
Please complete registration 

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Clegg senior trio sell 51% stake to employee trust

A trio of main shareholders in Nottingham-based contractor Clegg Group have sold a majority 51% stake in the business to an employee ownership trust.

The previous major shareholders, Keith Anderson, Simon Blackburn and Stephen Giltrap will retain a minority shareholding and continue their operational roles within the business, which includes the two trading subsidiaries Clegg Construction and Clegg Food Projects.

The directors were involved in a management buyout of the business back in 2007.

Group commercial director Keith Anderson said: “The group has weathered the last 18 months well and is in a good position to capitalise on the levels of trading currently being experienced.

“The group will post a strong set of results to December 2021 based on an expected turnover of £115m.

“Carry forward workload into 2022 is also looking particularly positive, and expectations are that revenue will increase to around £130m.

“The employee ownership route will allow us to provide opportunities for succession from within the internal management team over the coming years – an ethos that has been encouraged within the group over the last half century.”

The trust will be represented by a corporate body, led by an independent trustee and representatives from the employees and the board.

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BAM wins £30m net zero pathfinder college

The Department for Education has picked BAM to create a ‘pathfinder’ college that develops sustainable designs for building new schools.

It will build the green teaching and communal buildings at the site for Southam College in Warwickshire’s which has 1652 students.

The scheme intends to set the bar and guide how schools are built in the future.

As a ‘pathfinder’ the project is designed by BAM’s in-house team to achieve net zero carbon emissions and low energy use.

In addition, it uses passive design, biophilic design, climate resilience, and health and wellbeing elements.

BAM’s design team on board as lead architect has conducted extensive energy and climate modelling, interior design, and is providing the school with a strategy for achieving a net zero carbon in operation position for the rest of the estate’s life.


New facilities include science labs, a hall, drama facilities, 3D art room, music rooms, a sixth form hub, and a dedicated Special Educational Needs base.

It is also behind the structural engineering and MEP design.

Dave Ellis, BAM’s regional director in the Midlands, said: “The building will be net zero in operation, and we are also reducing the embodied carbon – the carbon in the actual materials used in the construction.

“We’ve evaluated the base design and produced a range of options to reduce embodied carbon.

“What we learn from Southam College will feed into the Department’s wider approach to reducing carbon in the education field.”

BAM will work around the school while it is open so classes and activities continue uninterrupted during the project.

 

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MPs call for 5-year pause on Smart motorway programme

MPs on the Transport Select Committee have urged the Government to pause the Smart Motorway Programme amid rising safety concerns.

The MPs want to see the Office for Rail and Road start a probe into the safety of all-lane running motorways, which have no hard shoulder, and scrutinise the Government’s recent £500m package of measures to make Smart motorways safer for motorists.

It described the government’s decision in March 2020 that all future smart motorways would be all-lane-running versions as “premature”.

The Commons’ Transport Select Committee said there was not enough safety and economic data to justify continuing with the plans.

It recommended the Department and National Highways should pause the rollout of all-lane running motorways until five-years of safety data is available for the remaining 112 miles of all-lane running motorway introduced before 2020.

National Highways has already committed to ensuring all new stretches of all-lane-running ‘smart’ motorways are fitted with emergency refuge areas (ERAs) no more than one mile apart at any point and 0.75 miles apart wherever possible.

The Transport Committee, in its report published today, has now called for these same measures to be taken on the existing smart motorway network, with ERAs retrofitted at these same intervals.

The Department for Transport said it would consider the recommendations.

Developers urged to claim land remediation tax relief

R&D tax relief specialist Recoup Capital has launched a land remediation relief service where land owners can claim 50p in the pound back in relief for removing ground abnormalities such as asbestos, knotweed or any structures predating 1998.

Land remediation relief (LRR) is a generous corporation tax relief available to investors and developers incurring expenditure on the remediation of contaminated land, including derelict structures.

The scheme is designed to encourage the clean-up of brownfield and contaminated sites to bring them back into economic use.

Land remediation relief is calculated on 150% of qualifying expenditure. Property investors and land owners are able to claim the full 150% in the year in which the expenditure was incurred.

It includes developments, refurbishments, fit-outs and regeneration projects and can be backdated two financial years.

Recoup Capital partner Anthony Doran said: “Recoup supported the construction sector throughout Covid with £20m in Research and Development rebates. Our national client base in the sector has found these services invaluable.

“Here at Recoup we strive to help all sectors we care about unlock capital they may not have been previously aware of. We have now launched land remediation relief with our chartered tax advisers as well as R&D, Stamp Duty, Capital Allowance providing a suite of products to assist with cash flow and profitability of all schemes.

“It all starts with an initial ten minute call to ensure you qualify.”

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HS2 subbies have to sign up for diversity and inclusion training

All HS2 subcontractors and suppliers will be expected to “embed Diversity and Inclusion best practice across their business processes.”

Leaders of the £106bn project have launched HS2 Marketplace which allows suppliers of all sizes access diversity training and resources.

The HS2 Marketplace platform is designed and backed by diversity and inclusion consultant the Clear Company who have awarded HS2 their Clear Assured Platinum Standard accreditation.

More than 2,300 businesses have already won work on HS2 and thousands more are expected to join them as £25bn worth of contract opportunities flow out into the wider supply chain over the coming years.

Bidders will be expected to use the Marketplace platform to access training and resources to support them in meeting and evaluating progress against key performance indicators set by HS2.

The key performance indicators are:

Training for all colleagues on Diversity and Inclusion specifically, legal obligations, inclusive job design, inclusive talent sourcing, inclusive shortlisting, the inclusive interview and creating an evidence-based audit trailEffective monitoring of Diversity and Inclusion at each stage of the recruitment cycleA reasonable adjustments programme for colleagues and candidates that is proactive, timely and effectiveEvidence of attracting a diverse candidate pool from both traditional and non-traditional recruitment channelsEvidence of creating an inclusive working environment for colleagues including flexible working, colleague networks and objective performance managementThe use of accessible technology for application and assessment

An HS2 spokesperson said: “HS2 expects all its suppliers to act in a manner which is consistent with the HS2 Values. Each Tier 1 contractor has specific contractual requirements in relation to equality, diversity and inclusion which flow down to the sub-contractors that they work with.”

HS2’s seven construction partners have already introduced a number of practical measures to champion diversity, inclusion and employee wellbeing across their worksites.

Mace Dragados has implemented a new ‘Make it Stick’ campaign, which ensures that LGBT + trained allies are easily identifiable on site through high visibility stickers worn on their hard hats.

Eiffage, Kier, Ferrovial Construction and BAM Nuttall (EKFB) has developed a bespoke programme of men’s and women’s health workshops, as well as creating wellbeing and prayer room spaces at its construction sites while the Skanska Costain STRABAG joint venture (SCS) is upgrading its employee app to enable staff to capture, track and monitor EDI best practice.

Mark Lomas, Head of Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) at HS2 said: “With two decades of construction work ahead of us HS2 is naturally placed to be a real driver for change, and we’ll achieve this by ensuring that every company engaged in delivering Britain’s new railway plays their part in setting a new EDI standard.

“HS2 Marketplace enables our suppliers to be confident that their practices and processes, from recruitment through to the workplace environment, are truly inclusive and follow the best practice standards we expect.”

HS2 said its supply chain is already performing well, with the number of disabled, Black and Ethnically Diverse, and female workers exceeding industry averages.

Kate Headley, Director of the Clear Company said: “Once again HS2 have demonstrated ground-breaking progress and innovation with the launch of the Marketplace platform.

“This is a significant step forward in creating a truly inclusive engineering sector and the constructive, supportive approach will enable HS2 suppliers to improve access to long term career opportunities, for all people, right across the sector.”

Race starts for £1.6bn NHS construction consultants deal

NHS Shared Business Services has started the bidding process for its long-awaited third-generation construction consultants framework.

More than 200 firms will face a fight to retain places on the £1.6bn framework ,which can be used by other qualifiying public clients.

Firms will battle for spots in 16 distinct consultancy services areas across a dozen regions of the UK.

The framework will also be divided into 11 value bands based on construction project value.

NHS SBS lotting for Construction Consultancy Services

Lot 1 Architectural Services

Lot 2 Project Management

Lot 3 Civil & Structural Engineering

Lot 4 Quantity Surveyor

Lot 5 Mechanical, Electrical and Public Health (MEP) Services

Lot 6 Principal Designer Services

Lot 7 Multidisciplinary Services

Lot 8 Building Surveyors

Lot 9 Health Care Planning

Lot 10 Modular Building & Modern Methods Of Construction (MMC) Consultancy

Lot 11 Digitalising Construction

Lot 12 Health and Safety

Lot 13 Environmental Consultancy

Lot 14 Net Zero, Energy Efficiency & Carbon Management Services

Lot 15 Fire Engineering

Lot 16 Ancillary Services

The new four-year consultancy framework will go live in April 2022. Firms have until 13 December to submit bids.

For more information click here.

 

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Go-ahead for £40m West Cumberland hospital phase 2

Copeland Borough Council has granted planning for the £40m phase 2 of West Cumberland Hospital’s planned redevelopment in Whitehaven.

Graham Construction will now start work on the two-storey extension project in the Spring.

North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust developed ambitious plan to replace approximately 40% of the original structure at WCH and build upon the £90m phase 1 of the project which was completed in 2015.

The redevelopment includes a Specialist Pallative Care unit, a 24 bed ‘Step Down’ area as well as a Stroke and Rehabilitaion ward and a Short Stay Paediatric Assessment Unit, and 7 inpatient beds.

Graham will also carry out improvements to Block E and F with blocks Q and H being demolished to create parking and landscaped areas.

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Bidding starts for £600m animal science estate deal

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs has opened the bidding for a new framework to deliver buildings for its Animal and Plant Health Agency science estate.

The Engineering Delivery Framework has been split into seven lots covering infrastructure, building construction and design.

DEFRA estimates successful firms will share around £600m of spend at the main estate in Weybridge, Surrey as well as the regional labs at Starcross, Camarthen, Penrith, Newcastle, Shrewsbury, Bury St Edmonds, Sutton Bonnington and Lasswade.

SED Framework

Lot 1: M&E heavy design, build, installation and refurbishments projects  inside the containment laboratory environment

Lot 2: General building works outside of containment areas

Lot 3: Site infrastructure, including earthworks and utilities

Lot 4: Security Systems, including engineering work for CCTV installations and repair and maintenance

Lot 5:  Delivery of biowaste effluent treatment plants

Lot 6: Multiple Discipline Design Services

Lot 7: Professional Services, specifically PM and cost management services for construction projects

 

Bid documents, which can be found on the web portal should be returned by 1 December.

The new line-up of engineering partners will come into force from 1 September 2022 and run for four years.

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