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    Re:Construction podcast 194: graphene concrete, payment law and plant margins for engineers

    January 21, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Re:Construction podcast 194: graphene concrete, payment law and plant margins for engineers

    First reported on The Construction Index

    30 Second Briefing

    Versarien’s collapse puts its Cementene graphene-enhanced concrete admixture in doubt, raising questions over whether graphene additives can achieve consistent performance, certification and cost benefits in mainstream construction mixes. The UK Supreme Court’s Providence v Hexagon ruling is described as a landmark for late payment law, with implications for drafting and enforcing construction payment terms and adjudication strategies. A young plant hire firm in northeast England is reported to be achieving around 40% pre-tax margins, signalling strong demand and tight fleet management in regional equipment supply.

    Technical Brief

    • Episode 194 of Re:Construction runs as a discussion podcast, not a written technical case.
    • Commentators question whether graphene dosing and dispersion can be controlled reliably in ready-mix supply chains.
    • Certification challenges are linked to proving repeatable performance across multiple concrete plants and mix designs.
    • Cost concerns focus on whether graphene loading rates can be justified against conventional SCMs and fibres.
    • Adjudication strategy is discussed in terms of drafting clearer interim payment and “pay less” notice mechanisms.

    Our Take

    Versarien’s presence in this graphene-focused episode comes just days after administrators were appointed to the company, so any discussion of Cementene or construction graphene will be coloured by its move from technology scale‑up to insolvency case study.

    Graphene appears in only a handful of keyword‑matched pieces in our Materials coverage, so this podcast gives relatively rare practitioner‑level insight into how UK contractors and suppliers are actually trying to commercialise it in concrete and other products.

    The inclusion of Providence and Hexagon alongside Versarien links advanced materials with contract law risk: the recent Supreme Court ruling on Providence Building Services vs Hexagon Housing Association underlines how payment and termination provisions can be as critical to innovative product roll‑out as the underlying technology itself.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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