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    Stadium Structures at AFC Bournemouth: phased expansion insights for designers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Stadium Structures at AFC Bournemouth: phased expansion insights for designers

    Stadium Structures has been appointed pre-construction partner for AFC Bournemouth’s phased expansion of Vitality Stadium, replacing the existing south stand with a 7,000-seat grandstand and lifting total capacity from 11,286 to more than 20,000 to meet Premier League and UEFA standards. The scheme includes a 3,000-seat lower tier built first, infilled south-east and north-west corners, relocated turnstiles and ticket office to a new perimeter, and internal refurbishments to east and west stands with three new hospitality spaces plus upgraded media and broadcast facilities. Modular construction and precision-engineered components are intended to minimise disruption as upper tiers and further north and east stand extensions proceed through the 2026–27 season, subject to planning approval in May.

    Slough diagnostic hub delivery: modular build and BIM lessons for project teams
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Slough diagnostic hub delivery: modular build and BIM lessons for project teams

    A £25m modular community diagnostic hub at Upton Hospital, Slough, has been delivered by Western in under a year, with pre-assembled modules made watertight within five days and internal fit out completed in a matter of days. Using BIM 3D modelling and full offsite fabrication, Western acted as turnkey contractor, also delivering external works including a reconfigured car park with EV charging infrastructure in a live hospital environment. The hub will operate 12 hours daily with capacity for 150,000 tests a year, including MRI, CT, ultrasound, respiratory and cardiology diagnostics.

    ICE on UK infrastructure’s £725bn ‘Herculean to-do list’: delivery lessons for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    ICE on UK infrastructure’s £725bn ‘Herculean to-do list’: delivery lessons for engineers

    Delivering the UK government’s £725bn, 10-year Infrastructure Strategy is being constrained by limited sector capacity, low productivity growth and fragmented delivery, the Institution of Civil Engineers warns. ICE points to the volume of concurrent major works—spanning rail upgrades, strategic roads, flood defences and energy transition assets—as exceeding current design, construction and regulatory bandwidth. The body calls for rapid scaling of skills, digital delivery methods such as BIM and common data environments, and more integrated client–contractor frameworks to avoid delays and cost escalation.

    M3 Junction 9 £290M upgrade: giant gyratory beams and staging notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    M3 Junction 9 £290M upgrade: giant gyratory beams and staging notes for engineers

    Engineers have installed two 48m-long steel bridge beams over the M3 during planned weekend closures as part of the £290M Junction 9 upgrade near Winchester, one of Hampshire’s busiest motorway interchanges. The beams form a key element of a new gyratory layout designed to improve traffic flow between the M3 and A34, requiring precision lifts over live carriageways within tight possession windows. The operation signals the start of major bridge superstructure works, with subsequent phases to complete deck construction and tie-ins to existing slip roads.

    HS2 Curzon Street piling completion: programme and foundation notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    HS2 Curzon Street piling completion: programme and foundation notes for engineers

    Completion of more than 2,000 concrete piles for HS2’s Curzon Street station in Birmingham marks the end of the main deep-foundation phase for the city-centre terminus. The piled foundations will carry the station’s multi-platform superstructure and associated over-track development, designed to accommodate high-speed rail loads and complex urban constraints. With piling finished, contractors can shift resources to pile caps, ground beams and station box works, compressing the programme’s critical path for structural and rail systems installation.

    Kazakhstan uranium controls and Laramide exit: project and supply risks for engineers
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Kazakhstan uranium controls and Laramide exit: project and supply risks for engineers

    New Kazakh subsoil code amendments giving Kazatomprom priority rights and at least 75–90% stakes in new uranium joint ventures have prompted Laramide Resources to abandon a three‑year option over 5,500 sq. km in the Chu‑Sarysu Basin, where it had planned a 15,000‑metre drilling campaign with three rigs ready to mobilise. Existing JVs such as Cameco’s 40:60 Inkai and Orano’s 51:49 Katco are grandfathered until current subsoil agreements expire, but any extensions or production increases will require Kazatomprom to reach 90% ownership or receive conversion/enrichment technology. Analysts see a de facto nationalisation that could divert future Kazakh output towards Russian and Chinese buyers and support already‑elevated uranium prices above US$100/lb.

    US Antimony $27M DPA funding: supply chain and project notes for mine planners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    US Antimony $27M DPA funding: supply chain and project notes for mine planners

    US Antimony has secured $27 million in Defense Production Act Title III funding to modernise and expand its Montana smelter, currently capable of producing 5 million lb of antimony metal and described as the only fully integrated antimony operation outside China and Russia. The funding will also advance development of a 35,000-acre, 120-claim antimony project in Alaska to provide domestic feedstock and support full vertical integration from ore extraction through flotation to finished products. The Pentagon frames the move as reducing supply risk for flame retardants, batteries and munitions.

    PDAC Silicon Discovery of the Year: mapping and drilling lessons for mine geologists
    Mining
    4 months ago

    PDAC Silicon Discovery of the Year: mapping and drilling lessons for mine geologists

    AngloGold Ashanti’s Silicon project in southern Nevada has earned PDAC’s Thayer Lindsley Discovery of the Year after detailed field mapping and core logging converted an “oddball” alteration system into one of the largest recent US gold finds. Probable reserves now stand at 88 million tonnes grading 1.75 g/t gold and 2.75 g/t silver, totalling about 5 million oz. gold and 7.8 million oz. silver, 200 km from Las Vegas. Geologist Paul Bartos stressed that Landsat-based alteration mapping, followed by systematic drilling, was critical in a district long dismissed as over-explored.

    Pan American’s La Colorada silver mine expansion: grade, phasing and risk notes for engineers
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Pan American’s La Colorada silver mine expansion: grade, phasing and risk notes for engineers

    Pan American Silver has identified at least four new high-grade veins — Filomena, Nicolasa, Bernardina and Josefina — at its La Colorada mine in Zacatecas, with about 40% of recent drill holes assaying above 1,000 g/t silver in the Candelaria zones. The company plans to fold the results into a June mineral reserve and resource update and is shifting to a phased development plan targeting higher-grade vein and skarn zones. The expansion comes as Mexico’s silver sector operates under elevated security risk following cartel-related violence and worker abductions.

    Resolute Mining’s Côte d’Ivoire gold additions: resource uplift and project lens for engineers
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Resolute Mining’s Côte d’Ivoire gold additions: resource uplift and project lens for engineers

    Resolute Mining has lifted its global gold resource 60% year-on-year to 347 million tonnes at 1.6 g/t (17.63 million oz.), after acquiring the Doropo and ABC projects in Côte d’Ivoire from AngloGold Ashanti for $150 million, adding 6.6 million oz. The group now holds 6.8 million oz. in ore reserves on a 100% basis, up 55%, including 2.5 million oz. at Doropo and an initial 348,000 oz. reserve at Tomboronkoto in Senegal, with 5.9 million oz. attributable. Syama in Mali, mined as a sub-level cave, is forecast to process 2.6 million tonnes in 2026 at 2.4–2.5 g/t.

    Gold price declines: macro drivers and project valuation notes for miners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Gold price declines: macro drivers and project valuation notes for miners

    Gold fell as much as 1.5% to $5,053/oz on Thursday, with US futures down about 1% to $5,080/oz, as a stronger dollar and expectations of reduced US Federal Reserve easing outweighed safe‑haven demand from the escalating Middle East conflict. Swaps markets now price only about 35 basis points of Fed cuts by year‑end, down from 60 bps last week, raising the opportunity cost of holding non‑yielding bullion. ING commodity strategist Ewa Manthey attributes part of the drop to investors liquidating gold to meet losses in US equities, rather than a shift in fundamentals.

    Codelco–Microsoft AI collaboration: operational data and risk insights for mine teams
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Codelco–Microsoft AI collaboration: operational data and risk insights for mine teams

    Codelco has signed an 18‑month memorandum of understanding with Microsoft to deploy artificial intelligence, advanced analytics, autonomous operations and strengthened cybersecurity across its copper mines, backed by joint strategic and operational governance. The collaboration targets intensive use of operational data for AI‑driven decision-making and automation of critical processes, with both parties committing to early testing of new digital solutions under strict data protection standards. The deal extends a 27‑year technical relationship and signals large‑scale digital integration across the world’s largest copper producer’s operations in Chile.

    First Nations Coalition and Indigenous equity: permitting lessons for mine planners
    Policy
    4 months ago

    First Nations Coalition and Indigenous equity: permitting lessons for mine planners

    Indigenous equity stakes in Canadian resource projects are being pushed by the First Nations Major Projects Coalition (FNMPC) as a practical route to faster mine and energy permitting, with CEO Mark Podlasly arguing that ownership aligns community rights with project economics. FNMPC, now representing 186 First Nations, has supported deals such as a collective 10% stake in the 670 km Coastal GasLink pipeline and ~50% Indigenous equity in multiple electricity transmission lines, and is advising an early-stage lithium project in northern Ontario. With Ottawa’s Major Projects Office targeting two‑year approvals for major mining and energy schemes, Podlasly contends that Indigenous co-investors are far less likely to litigate or oppose projects that embed their environmental and economic priorities.

    NexGen’s Rook I uranium mine: capex, schedule and output lens for mine planners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    NexGen’s Rook I uranium mine: capex, schedule and output lens for mine planners

    NexGen Energy will begin construction this summer on the C$2.2 billion Rook I uranium mine in Saskatchewan’s southwest Athabasca Basin, after securing Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission approval for its environmental assessment and construction licence. The Arrow deposit hosts 4.57 million tonnes of probable reserves grading 2.37% U3O8, with feasibility work indicating output of almost 30 million lb. U3O8 per year over the first half of an 11-year mine life, making it the largest planned uranium producer in North America. At a US$95/lb uranium price, Rook I carries an NPV8 of C$6.32 billion and a 45% IRR, with a four-year build expected.

    Vizsla Mexico kidnappings: security and risk lessons for mine project teams
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Vizsla Mexico kidnappings: security and risk lessons for mine project teams

    Vizsla Silver has confirmed two more deaths among the 10 workers kidnapped from its Panuco silver-gold project near Concordia, Sinaloa, in late January, bringing the death toll to seven as Mexican authorities continue search and investigation efforts amid cartel-related violence about 50 km east of Mazatlán. The company is reviewing and tightening on-site security protocols in coordination with local authorities, directly affecting risk planning for future underground and surface operations at Panuco, which targets first production in 2027. Vizsla’s Toronto-listed shares dropped as much as 4.6% to C$5.39 before recovering to C$5.51, leaving its market capitalisation around C$1.9 billion.

    Jackson wins Colchester St Botolph’s Circus works: staging and safety notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Jackson wins Colchester St Botolph’s Circus works: staging and safety notes for engineers

    A £15.2m remodelling of Colchester’s St Botolph’s Circus has been awarded to Jackson Civil Engineering, with main construction scheduled from April 2026 to autumn 2027. The scheme removes existing pedestrian underpasses on Southway and installs new at-grade crossing points to improve pedestrian and cyclist safety and connectivity into the city centre. For designers and contractors, the works will involve complex traffic management and staged demolition/reconstruction in a constrained urban gateway.

    Morgan Sindall Aylesbury school expansion: design and safety notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Morgan Sindall Aylesbury school expansion: design and safety notes for engineers

    Morgan Sindall Construction has begun a £13m expansion of Kingsbrook School in Aylesbury, adding a 2,300 m², three-storey block to increase capacity from 1,080 to around 1,440 pupils by moving from six to eight forms of entry. The scheme delivers 20 classrooms, new science labs, food preparation rooms, enlarged SEN provision and additional sixth form study and social space, supporting growth from the surrounding Kingsbrook housing development. A traditional steel frame with precast floors is being used for rapid erection, with segregated worksites and a dedicated access tunnel to maintain safe pupil routes to sports facilities.

    Willmott Dixon Cranleigh leisure centre: capex, energy and design notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Willmott Dixon Cranleigh leisure centre: capex, energy and design notes for engineers

    Waverley Borough Council has approved a revised £36m budget, including an extra £4.9m, for Willmott Dixon to deliver a new Passivhaus‑certified leisure centre in Cranleigh by winter 2027. Designed to replace the 1969, high‑energy facility, the building is expected to use about 60% less energy per square metre and cut operational carbon emissions by roughly 75%. The design includes upgraded air‑handling and latest‑generation pool microfiltration, with most cost escalation attributed to rising materials and services prices despite prior inflation allowances.

    HBC joins MukAway soil exchange: digital spoil logistics insights for project teams
    Software
    4 months ago

    HBC joins MukAway soil exchange: digital spoil logistics insights for project teams

    HBC Construction (formerly Henry Boot) has become the first major contractor to join MukAway, a digital spoil-management platform that matches sites with surplus soil to projects needing fill. The app, already used by major housebuilders including Vistry, Barratt, Bellway and Keepmoat, operates on a low subscription model to broker soil movements and cut waste to landfill. HBC managing director Lee Powell expects the platform to reduce muck-away costs and enable direct collaboration between contractors and housebuilders on bulk earthworks.

    Taylor Wimpey cladding costs: capital, risk and delivery impacts for project teams
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Taylor Wimpey cladding costs: capital, risk and delivery impacts for project teams

    Taylor Wimpey’s 2025 pre-tax profit fell more than 50% to £146.5m despite a 13% revenue rise to £3,845m, as it booked £243.8m of exceptional costs including a £225.8m cladding fire safety provision and an £18m Competition & Markets Authority settlement over cartel investigations. The cladding provision directly impacts remediation budgets on legacy high-rise schemes, tying up capital that could otherwise support new housing delivery and land acquisition. The 2026 order book slipped to £2,182m or 7,678 homes by 1 March, down from £2,283m and 8,097 homes a year earlier, although spring sales are reported as improving.

    PMI house-building slump: implications for UK infrastructure project teams
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    PMI house-building slump: implications for UK infrastructure project teams

    UK construction output contracted faster in February as the S&P Global UK Construction PMI fell to 44.5 from January’s 46.4, marking 14 consecutive months below the 50.0 threshold, with residential work weakest at an index of 37.0 and civil engineering at 41.0. New orders have declined every month since January 2025, yet 42% of firms still expect higher output over the next year, citing forthcoming infrastructure and energy projects. Contractors report sharper input cost inflation for concrete, copper, insulation and steel, even as material lead times have shortened for seven straight months.

    Hethel spine road: design, access and development notes for infrastructure teams
    Infrastructure
    4 months ago

    Hethel spine road: design, access and development notes for infrastructure teams

    Construction of the £8.4m Hethel spine road has started in South Norfolk, with Jackson Civil Engineering moving from preliminary works into main construction, including a new roundabout giving direct access to an expanded employment zone beside the Lotus Cars factory. The scheme will unlock 20 hectares of development land owned by Hethel Enterprises, allocated in the Greater Norwich Local Development Plan for engineering and technology businesses. Delivered jointly by South Norfolk Council and Norfolk County Council, the road is intended to support growth of the Hethel Engineering Centre and co-located start-ups.

    PLAXIS and GeoStudio student licences: watermark rules and limits for design use
    Software
    4 months ago

    PLAXIS and GeoStudio student licences: watermark rules and limits for design use

    Student licences for PLAXIS and GeoStudio now apply visible watermarks to outputs, with PLAXIS marking all plots and reports and GeoStudio watermarking only exported graphics, not on-screen views. The watermark text typically includes “Student Version” or similar, cannot be removed or hidden, and persists in printed or PDF deliverables, making results unsuitable for formal design submissions, commercial reports, or regulatory approvals. Educators and students are advised to use these licences strictly for teaching, coursework, and non-commercial research, switching to full licences for any professional geotechnical design work.

    Maptek acquires PETRA: integrated orebody intelligence workflow for mine planners
    Mining
    4 months ago

    Maptek acquires PETRA: integrated orebody intelligence workflow for mine planners

    Maptek has acquired PETRA in full, increasing its stake from 25% to 100% and bringing PETRA’s orebody learning and data fusion technology fully in‑house. The deal consolidates PETRA’s AI‑driven orebody intelligence tools with Maptek’s existing mine planning and design platforms such as Vulcan and Evolution, aiming to link block models, drill‑and‑blast, and production data in a single decision‑support workflow. For geologists and mining engineers, this signals tighter integration of real‑time data analytics with long‑term resource and scheduling models.

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