HS2’s upcoming procurement pipeline
With work on the first phase of the rail scheme linking London to Birmingham set to go ahead, Ian Weinfass looks at the timeline of imminent procurement information for the project
19 Feb 2020 Comments Off on HS2’s upcoming procurement pipeline
With work on the first phase of the rail scheme linking London to Birmingham set to go ahead, Ian Weinfass looks at the timeline of imminent procurement information for the project
12 Feb 2020 Comments Off on Contractors face Russian roulette with HS2 risks
There was some cheer in the construction industry yesterday as HS2’s future was – apparently – confirmed by the prime minister. A pipeline of work worth billions and guaranteed for up to 20 years is now in place. Don’t be fooled, however, into thinking the way ahead is clear. There…
12 Feb 2020 Comments Off on ‘Discipline and order’: the changes HS2 needs to make
Organisational change is one of the crucial caveats to the prime minister’s approval of the HS2 project.
11 Feb 2020 Comments Off on HS2 green light could become a beacon for better business
The prime minister’s fulsome backing for HS2 is good news for the construction sector. With luck, the Oakervee review will prove to be the final episode of government indecision about the landmark project, though I doubt it will be the last inquiry into it. But with a project of HS2’s…
21 Jan 2020 Comments Off on The end of uncertainty or simply the end?
Looking back, 2019 racked up a grim tally of business failures, with roughly one contractor going bust every fortnight. Sadly, there is not much reason to suppose that 2020 will prove any kinder to overstretched firms struggling with sticky cashflow. The economic backdrop certainly seems unlikely to help. While December’s…
06 Jan 2020 Comments Off on HS2’s procurement paradox
Former deputy chair of the Oakervee Review Lord Berkeley produced his own HS2 review yesterday, having left the panel in November. In his “dissenting” report, Lord Berkeley claimed it is likely the project will open late and over budget, costing £107bn at 2019 prices. Lord Berkeley also criticised the project’s procurement,…
23 Dec 2019 Comments Off on Review of 2019: Cladding, collapses and the Conservatives
It has been quite a year for construction. CN editor Lem Bingley has a look back at some of the highlights – and, inevitably, low points
18 Dec 2019 Comments Off on All I want for Christmas…
Back in March I wrote about the optimistic vision for the West Midlands that Andy Street energetically trumpeted from MIPIM. The mayor of the West Midlands couldn’t have been more ebullient as he launched £10bn of investment opportunities ranging from infrastructure and regeneration to residential schemes at Cannes’s international property…
05 Nov 2019 Comments Off on Oakervee delay means we must wait for an HS2 debate
There will be no clarity on the fate of HS2 before the general election. The Oakervee Review – the speedy, six-week study promised by freshly installed PM Boris Johnson back in July – took more than three months to conclude and won’t now report its findings until after the country…
03 Sep 2019 Comments Off on The election battle for HS2
Things are moving so fast in UK government circles at the moment that it’s becoming increasingly impossible to guess what will happen next. While I was writing this piece, the number of MPs backing Boris Johnson’s plan to leave the EU with or without a deal by October 31 has…