• Go-ahead for major Nottingham bioscience project

    Go-ahead for major Nottingham bioscience project
    Developer Conygar has secured planning for a major bioscience facility at Nottingham’s Island Quarter.
    Two buildings connected at the upper levels by glazed link will provide 245,000 sq ft of laboratory and office space.
    Designed by CPMG Architects, the Poplar Street project is subject to the documenting of the section 106 agreement.Robert Ware, Chief Executive of Conygar, said: “We are delighted that the next phase of development has been approved.
    “Nottingham is already home
  • McLaren takes 256-bed Leeds student tower job

    Local developer Pullans has secured planning approval and appointed McLaren Construction as main contractor for a 14-storey student tower at Joseph’s Well former factory site in Leeds city centre.
    Full consent has been granted for the major new purpose-built student accommodation scheme, marking the biggest transformation of the Joseph’s Well estate in more than 45 years.
    The project, known as The Tower, will deliver 256 student bedrooms and represents the single largest investment i
  • Tower crane drivers set to strike

    Tower crane drivers are planning a series of strikes starting with a one-day stoppage later this month.
    The action could halt major sites across the country with London hardest hit.
    Drivers at leading crane rental company Wolffkran, represented by Unite, have voted to start a series of 24-hour strikes on Tuesday January 27 then every fortnight after that.The Enquirer understands around 90 drivers are union members at the crane rental giant.
    A crane driver source said the dispute centred on a lac
  • Persimmon builds momentum with 12% jump in completions

    House builder Persimmon has posted a stronger-than-expected trading performance for 2025 after lifting completions by 12%.
    In a trading statement ahead of reporting annual results the firm signaled that full-year underlying profit before tax would be at the top end of City forecasts.
    It completed 11,905 homes in the year to 31 December, up from 10,664 a year earlier, driven by an expanding outlet base and steady demand across its regional footprint.But looking ahead chief executive Dean Finch sa
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  • Henry Boot seals planning for Goole 5.5m sq ft freeport

    Henry Boot has securedoutline planning consent for a 5.5m sq ft freeport industrial and logistics giant in Goole in a major boost for the Humber manufacturing corridor.
    The scheme, known as FREEPORT 36, is being brought forward by Henry Boot’s development arm HBD in partnership with landowner St John’s College Cambridge.
    The consent paves the way for a 300-acre industrial and manufacturing park delivering buildings from 40,000 sq ft to more than 1m sq ft.
    Detailed plans will be drawn
  • Henry Boot seal planning for Goole 5.5m sq ft freeport

    Henry Boot has securedoutline planning consent for a 5.5m sq ft freeport industrial and logistics giant in Goole in a major boost for the Humber manufacturing corridor.
    The scheme, known as FREEPORT 36, is being brought forward by Henry Boot’s development arm HBD in partnership with landowner St John’s College Cambridge.
    The consent paves the way for a 300-acre industrial and manufacturing park delivering buildings from 40,000 sq ft to more than 1m sq ft.
    Detailed plans will be drawn
  • FP McCann buys roofing products firm Easy-Trim

    Precast concrete manufacturer FP McCann has acquired Easy-Trim Roofing and Construction Products Ltd out of administration.
    Lancashire based Easy-Trim posted a turnover of £18.1m in its latest results for the year to December 31 2023 generating a pre-tax profit of £233,000.
    McCann said: “The acquisition of Easy-Trim is a fantastic addition to the FP McCann group and a significant step in the growth of our roofing and building products division.“Easy-Trim’s commitmen
  • Trade body BESA boots out five more firms in standards purge

    The Building Engineering Services Association has suspended five more member firms as it tightens the screws on technical and professional standards across the heating and ventilating sector.
    The competency crackdown takes the total number of firms suspended by the trade body in the past eight months to 19.BESA’s council said it was taking robust action in the interests of the wider building services sector and clients.The suspended firms failed its independent Competence Assessment Standa
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  • Father-of-six dies in demolition site tragedy

    A father-of-six has been confirmed as the worker who died in an accident at a demolition site in Renfrewshire.
    Derek Russell was fatally injured while working on a regeneration project demolishing empty flat blocks in Paisley on Friday.
    The 36-year-old was taken to Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow but died from his injuries the following day.He was employed by Greenock based demolition specialist Caskie Limited.
    Euan Caskie, a director of the company, told the BBC: “This is a
  • Winvic wins £340m M&S mega shed at DIRFT

    Winvic has landed the job to build a vast 1.3m sq ft national distribution centre for Marks & Spencer at Daventry International Rail Freight Terminal.
    Appointed by Prologis, the £340m scheme will become a flagship hub in M&S’s food supply chain as the retailer targets major growth.
    The 52-week build will see Winvic deliver two low-carbon warehouses with multi-storey offices, a security hub and vehicle maintenance unit, alongside major infrastructure works next to the M1.The f
  • Bidders day set for £4.5bn Southern Construction Framework

    Contractors are being called to a bidders day in London as councils move to re-procure the £4.5bn Southern Construction Framework.
    Devon County Council and Hampshire County Council are preparing to launch the sixth generation of the framework, with around 20 firms expected to battle to retain their places.
    Tendering is due to go live in March, with the bidders day on 21 January setting out plans for the next framework and sharing findings from earlier market engagement.
    The current Souther
  • British Land CEO to join warehouse developer

    British Land CEO Simon Carter is leaving the business to take-up a similar role at warehouse developer and investor P3 Logistics Parks.
    Carter has been in charge at British Land for five years and first joined the developer in 2004.
    He has a 12-month notice period and British Land will now start the hunt for his successor.William Rucker, Chairman, said: “On behalf of the Board, I want to thank Simon for his significant contribution to British Land. During his 18 years here across two stint
  • Skanska slides 4,200 tonne railway bridge into place

    Skanska has completed the installation of a 4,200-tonne railway bridge over the M6 through Cumbria 13 hours ahead of schedule during a road closure over the weekend.
    Clifton railway bridge near Penrith has been replaced by Network Rail and Skanska as part of a £60m investment in the West Coast Main Line.
    The new 130-metre-long structure was carefully manoeuvred into place with millimetre precision on Saturday.Time-lapse footage shows how the new pre-built bridge – which has been wait
  • Facade specialist Permasteelisa (UK) hit by third year of losses

    Facade specialist Permasteelisa (UK) slipped to a deeper loss as legacy projects, inflation and fixed-price contract pressures continued to bite.
    The façade specialist grew revenue 24% to £182m in the year to 31 March 2025, driven by strong order intake and the UK emerging as the group’s largest regional contributor.
    But operating performance deteriorated, with the business posting an operating loss for the third consecutive year up to£8.5m from £5.6m a year earlie
  • Paddington life sciences tower moves into planning

    Plans have been submitted for a 16-storey clinical life sciences hub next to St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington.
    The 48,000 sq m Paddington Hub scheme, designed by HOK and promoted by Bartlet Asset Management, is proposed for the former Imperial College Medical School site in Westminster.
    The building is designed to house more than 1,800 clinicians, researchers and support staff, bringing together clinical trials, diagnostics and emerging health technologies in a single, purpose-built facili
  • “Future of construction” firm in administration

    Pioneering graphene firm Versarien is now in administration.
    The firm’s products included Cementene – a concrete admixture hailed as the “future of construction” which boosts strength and cuts carbon.
    Versarien has trialled its products on HS2 and signed a deal with Balfour Beatty to work on new products.Andrew Knowles and Andrew Poxon from Leonard Curtis have now been appointed Joint Administrators of the AIM listed firm.
    The company had been making losses for several ye
  • Balfour secures £900m Midlands highways upkeep deal

    Balfour Beatty has landed a huge Midlands highways maintenance term contract worth £900m after three local authorities joined forces to bundle their long-term road upkeep programmes.
    The seven-year deal has been awarded to Balfour Beatty Living Places following a joint procurement by Warwickshire County Council, Coventry City Council and Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council.
    The contract will run from May 2026 to May 2033 and can be extended by up to a further six years, taking the potent
  • Student rooms builder cancels London and defers Bristol projects

    Unite Students has slammed the brakes on parts of its development pipeline, blaming mounting viability pressures and a tougher planning environment as it pivots capital towards higher-yielding universities and shareholder returns.
    The country’s biggest student accommodation developer this morning said it had deferred delivery of its 500-bed Freestone Island scheme in Bristol while it explores options to secure “best value” from the project.
    The move releases around £55m o
  • Mace crowned annual contracts league champion

    Mace has been crowned the industry’s top contracts league winner after a blockbuster year of deal-making that left rivals trailing in its wake.
    The London-focused contractor emerged as 2025’s biggest work winner after banking £3.18bn of secured orders, powered by a hoard of projects including the £1.1bn British Library extension and a string of heavyweight office schemes in the Capital.
    The haul came in the same year Mace offloaded its profitable consultancy arm to concen
  • Leeds United to kick off stadium expansion this summer

    Leeds United will start work on a major expansion of Elland Road this summer after securing planning approval.
    Councillors at Leeds City Council gave green light yesterday evening to plans to raise capacity to up to 53,000, cementing its position as one of the largest club stadiums in the country.
    The scheme will see West and North stands partially demolished and rebuilt alongside targeted alterations to the South Stand, transforming the ground into a UEFA Category 4 stadium capable of hosting m
  • Leeds United set to kick off stadium expansion this summer

    Leeds United will start work on a major expansion of Elland Road this summer after securing planning approval.
    Councillors at Leeds City Council gave green light yesterday evening to plans to raise capacity to up to 53,000, cementing its position as one of the largest club stadiums in the country.
    The scheme will see West and North stands partially demolished and rebuilt alongside targeted alterations to the South Stand, transforming the ground into a UEFA Category 4 stadium capable of hosting m
  • Offsite specialist Merit went down owing suppliers £17m

    Subcontractors and suppliers have been left holding unpaid bills worth £17.4m following the collapse of offsite specialist Merit.
    The scale of the company’s debts have been revealed in an update by administrator Interpath who took control in November.
    The administrator’s proposals  for Merit Holdings state it is “highly unlikely” unsecured creditors will receive a penny for their outstanding invoices.Merit employed 284 staff at the time of administration who we
  • Bovis hires Sisk healthcare chief to scale up NHS work

    Bovis Construction (Europe) has hired former Sisk healthcare lead Nadeem Chaudhry to spearhead its hospital work push.
    Chaudhry joins the contractor with more than 24 years’ experience delivering complex, high-value healthcare schemes and a track record across major NHS and private sector projects.
    He arrives from Sisk, where he spent four years leading the firm’s UK healthcare portfolio, overseeing delivery through key frameworks including CCS P23 and NHS SBS.During his time at Sisk
  • Paul Bentley joins Mott MacDonald executive board

    Mott MacDonald has appointed Paul Bentley to its executive board.
    Bentley has worked as a director at JN Bentley since 1999, when Motts and Bentley first formed their successful JV, and will continue in that role alongside his new group-wide responsibilities.
    Mott MacDonald bought JN Bentley in 2014 and now delivers much of its work through the fully integrated design and build arm Mott MacDonald Bentley.
    Under Bentley’s leadership as managing director, the firm has grown into one of the c
  • Muse picked to steer 10,000-home Bristol Temple Quarter regeneration

    Muse has been picked to drive one of the country’s biggest city-centre regeneration schemes after being named preferred development partner for Bristol Temple Quarter.
    Muse Places will drive the delivery of up to 10,000 new homes alongside major commercial development, public realm and transport upgrades around the city’s main rail hub.
    The appointment hands Muse a leading role in shaping coordinated regeneration at Temple Meads West, with parallel work to help develop longer-term pr
  • Muse picked to steer 10,000-home Bristol Temple Quarter plan

    Muse has been picked to drive one of the country’s biggest city-centre regeneration schemes after being named preferred development partner for Bristol Temple Quarter.
    Muse Places will drive the delivery of up to 10,000 new homes alongside major commercial development, public realm and transport upgrades around the city’s main rail hub.
    The appointment hands Muse a leading role in shaping coordinated regeneration at Temple Meads West, with parallel work to help develop longer-term pr
  • £80m London housing scheme unlocked after flip to 100% social

    An £80m South London housing scheme is moving a step closer after developers switched the project to 100% social rent, unlocking fresh funding support.
    Clarion Housing Group and Hadley Property Group are pressing ahead with plans to redevelop the former Blenheim shopping Centre in Penge after securing grant backing from the Greater London Authority.
    The revised proposals would see 228 homes delivered entirely at social rent, with all properties allocated to people on London Borough of Brom
  • £300m Wales indoor ski resort clears final planning hurdle

    Plans for a £300m indoor ski slope and leisure resort at Rhydycar West have been waved through after the Welsh Government confirmed it would not call the scheme in.
    Councillors at Merthyr Tydfil Council gave the final green light this week, clearing the way for what is being billed as the UK’s longest indoor snow centre on land to the south west of the A470/A4102 roundabout.
    The Rhydycar West development will feature a 400m-long indoor ski slope, a tropical water park, indoor and out
  • Andrew Scott forecasts record-breaking year ahead

    Welsh contractor Andrew Scott predicts it will deliver the biggest turnover in its 155-year history as previously delayed project starts move to site.The firm has banked a £250m order book that will drive revenue up to around £120m in the year ahead.
    The sharp rebound at the family-run builder comes after a slight dip in turnover to £80m from £84m in the year to June 2025.
    The revenue slowdown was linked to the timing of work starting on site, with a number of schemes pro
  • Collapsing wall knocks labourer down stairwell

    A Cumbrian contractor has been fined £60,000 after a wall collapsed knocking a labourer through an open stairwell onto a concrete floor below.
    Ace Infra Ltd pleaded guilty after an incident led to employee, Mark Jones, spending a month in hospital recovering from his injuries.
    Lancaster Magistrates Court court heard how Jones was sweeping up dust and debris on the first floor of the building at the end of the working day.Earlier boards had been delivered and laid across a large opening in

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