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    Birmingham stadium brick chimneys: structural and services notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    Birmingham stadium brick chimneys: structural and services notes for engineers

    A £1.2bn, 62,000-seat Birmingham City FC stadium is proposed for Bordesley Green, with a bowl structure encircled by 12 brick chimney towers rising 120 m to support the roof and house lifts, stairs and ventilation. Designs by Heatherwick Studio, Steven Knight and Manica Architecture include a retractable roof and moveable pitch to switch between football, other sports and concerts, plus a chimney-top bar at the city’s highest level. Consultation runs ahead of a 2026 planning application, targeting completion for the 2030–31 season.

    Australian Power Equipment mining backup power: modular N+1 lessons for engineers
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Australian Power Equipment mining backup power: modular N+1 lessons for engineers

    Australian Power Equipment has supplied a rapid-deployment backup power solution for a mining operation using containerised diesel generator sets configured for N+1 redundancy to maintain critical loads during grid outages. The package integrates low-voltage switchboards, step-up transformers and remote monitoring, and is engineered to meet mine-site constraints on footprint, noise and emissions, including Tier 3-compliant engines and bunded fuel storage. For engineers, the case shows how pre‑engineered, modular genset systems can be mobilised quickly to stabilise power for crushers, dewatering and ventilation without major civil works.

    United Infrastructure’s £14m Bromsgrove deals: retrofit scope and delivery notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    United Infrastructure’s £14m Bromsgrove deals: retrofit scope and delivery notes for engineers

    United Infrastructure has secured two Bromsgrove District Housing Trust contracts worth £14m to retrofit and refurbish around 4,000 affordable homes across Bromsgrove and the wider Midlands. A £10m programme will deliver large-scale decarbonisation and thermal upgrades to more than 500 homes initially, potentially rising to 1,000, targeting EPC band C or better by 2030 and tackling damp and mould over a two‑year period. A separate £4m PfH‑procured contract, running to March 2026, covers kitchen and bathroom replacements, new boilers and heating systems, upgraded windows and doors, and roofing renewals.

    Morgan Sindall’s Salford acoustics building: design and vibration control notes for engineers
    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    Morgan Sindall’s Salford acoustics building: design and vibration control notes for engineers

    Construction has started on the University of Salford’s £24m acoustics institute, featuring vibration‑isolating foundations and extra‑dense concrete walls to create ultra‑low‑noise, idealised acoustic environments within a triple‑height, acoustically isolated laboratory core. Facilities will include anechoic chambers, a wind tunnel, a four‑chamber building envelope test suite for construction materials, and a perception engineering sleep lab, with some rooms designed to meet international standards for ultra‑precise acoustic measurements. Due for completion in mid‑2027, the building will support testing from AI‑enabled hearing aids to aeroplane engines, with an overhead crane for heavy test articles.

    AtkinsRéalis industrial director move: grid and storage implications for engineers
    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    AtkinsRéalis industrial director move: grid and storage implications for engineers

    AtkinsRéalis has appointed former SSE major projects director Ryan Macdonald as market director for power & industrial across the UK & Ireland, a new role spanning energy networks, grid infrastructure, power and renewables, and energy storage. He will lead work on next‑generation distribution and transmission networks, long‑duration energy storage schemes and industrial power systems for energy‑intensive users including manufacturers, data centres and ports. The move signals a push to integrate siting and permitting, advanced engineering and digitisation into large, complex energy and industrial assets.

    Galliford Try leadership shift: what Wheatley’s appointment means for project teams
    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    Galliford Try leadership shift: what Wheatley’s appointment means for project teams

    Galliford Try has appointed Cliff Wheatley as divisional managing director of its Building business and to the group executive board from 1 January 2026, succeeding long-serving MD Ian Jubb, who will retire in June 2026 after 19 years with the company. Wheatley, who joined via the Miller Construction acquisition in 2008 and has led Building operations in the northeast and Yorkshire since 2014, will be replaced there by current operations director Jeremy Barnett. The fully internal succession signals continuity in leadership for Galliford Try’s UK building and infrastructure portfolio.

    Bentry’s second Salford development: phasing, cost and programme notes for project teams
    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    Bentry’s second Salford development: phasing, cost and programme notes for project teams

    Bentry Capital has acquired the three-acre Irwell Gardens brownfield site in Salford for £12m, targeting an £80m GDV residential scheme fronting the River Irwell. Existing consent covers phase one with 50 three- and four-bedroom townhouses, while phase two is expected to add a further 50 houses and 100 apartments, with Mellior delivering construction for about £35m. Phase one is scheduled to start in Q1 2026 with an 18‑month build, and phase two is planned as a two‑year programme once planning is secured.

    Winvic’s £130m Oasis Birmingham BTR scheme: design and delivery notes for project teams
    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    Winvic’s £130m Oasis Birmingham BTR scheme: design and delivery notes for project teams

    Winvic Construction has secured a £130m contract to deliver Oasis Birmingham, an 11-storey, 456-home build-to-rent scheme on Kent Street funded by Heim Global Investor and developed by McLaren Living. The project comprises one- and two-bedroom apartments with internal amenities including a gym, residents’ lounge and co-working space, plus external courtyards and roof terraces, with completion targeted for 2029. For contractors and consultants, the scheme signals continued demand for high-density city-centre residential blocks and long-term BTR funding pipelines following Heim and McLaren’s 375-home Water Lane project in Leeds.

    Holcim UK–Thory acquisition: materials supply and recycling lens for project teams
    Materials
    7 months ago

    Holcim UK–Thory acquisition: materials supply and recycling lens for project teams

    Holcim UK has acquired PJ Thory and its subsidiaries Gemmix and Pro Minimix, adding nine sites with sand and gravel and limestone quarries, readymix concrete plants and a secondary aggregate recycling centre across the East Midlands and east of England. The deal follows Heidelberg Materials’ purchase of Mick George, with the Competition & Markets Authority having previously forced quarry and readymix disposals that helped make Gemmix the UK’s largest independently owned readymix supplier. Holcim gains additional mineral reserves, expanded readymix coverage and stronger recycled aggregate capacity in a region of intense competition.

    Cyprium greenlights Nifty copper restart: leach pad and groundwater notes for engineers
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Cyprium greenlights Nifty copper restart: leach pad and groundwater notes for engineers

    Cyprium Metals has approved restarting cathode operations at the Nifty Copper Complex in Western Australia, signalling a return to production at the previously mothballed heap leach–SX-EW facility. The decision follows board approval and positions Nifty to again produce copper cathode on site, rather than relying solely on concentrate or third-party processing. Geotechnical and processing teams will need to reassess leach pad integrity, pond liners and solution management after the operational hiatus, with particular attention to groundwater control and residual ore column performance in arid Pilbara conditions.

    Develop Global CEO tops 2025 pay: project risk and growth signals for engineers
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Develop Global CEO tops 2025 pay: project risk and growth signals for engineers

    Mining producer Develop Global’s chief executive Bill Beament has been named the highest‑paid Australian CEO in 2025, topping a cross‑sector remuneration survey that includes major ASX‑listed miners and contractors. His package reportedly exceeds peers at larger iron ore and coal producers, signalling how mid‑tier growth plays and project developers can now command premium executive pay. For engineers and project managers, this points to continued investor focus on aggressive brownfield expansions, fast‑tracked underground developments and higher‑risk growth strategies where leadership decisions directly affect capital allocation and schedule.

    Indium from mine waste: process design and project notes for Australia’s solar sector
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Indium from mine waste: process design and project notes for Australia’s solar sector

    Indium recovered from existing mine waste streams could underpin a domestic Australian solar PV manufacturing sector, with a new study pointing to tailings from zinc and lead operations as a major untapped source. Researchers note that indium is a key component in indium tin oxide (ITO) coatings for high‑efficiency thin‑film cells, yet Australia currently exports concentrates and imports finished solar modules. The work signals opportunities for retrofitting hydrometallurgical circuits at established base‑metal plants to extract indium, adding revenue while reducing long‑term tailings liabilities.

    Nyrstar’s Port Pirie antimony pilot: flowsheet and retrofit notes for engineers
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Nyrstar’s Port Pirie antimony pilot: flowsheet and retrofit notes for engineers

    Nyrstar has produced its first antimony metal from a pilot plant at the Port Pirie smelter in South Australia, marking Australia’s initial domestic antimony casting from a multi-metal facility. The pilot uses existing lead–zinc smelting infrastructure to process antimony-bearing feed, aiming to validate flowsheet performance and metal quality before any scale-up. For process and project engineers, the move signals potential future integration of antimony circuits into established base metal plants, reducing reliance on imported antimony trioxide and metal.

    Pangea Group slope stability article: GNSS monitoring insights for mine engineers
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Pangea Group slope stability article: GNSS monitoring insights for mine engineers

    Intelligent GNSS slope monitoring systems in open cut mines are moving from intermittent logging to permanently powered operation, collecting one position every 10 seconds and using interquartile filtering to deliver millimetric precision beyond standard centimetre-level RTK. Embedded software rejects outliers beyond 1.5–3 × IQR, routinely detecting 1–2 mm movements and generating multi-tiered products such as 5-minute (≈60-epoch) and 24-hour (≈8,640-epoch) averages. Time-series analyses show rolling 24-hour averages can cut detection lag by 40–60% for non-linear deformations, though longer 48-hour and weekly windows risk masking rapid, rainfall- or blast-driven accelerations.

    AGS Chair’s July 2024 update: safety data, report quality and EDI notes for geoengineers
    Geotechnical
    7 months ago

    AGS Chair’s July 2024 update: safety data, report quality and EDI notes for geoengineers

    AGS’s July update launches an Early Careers Video, “Discovering a Rewarding Career in the Geo-Industry”, for use by industry representatives in schools and universities, and reports 2023 geotechnical and geoenvironmental accident statistics based on a 127% increase in contributing organisations. A new two-part SiLC PTP series critiques the standard of land contamination reports submitted through the planning system, echoing regulator concerns about report quality and consistency. Forthcoming events include a 25 September EDI-focused webinar and a November Manchester meeting on groundwater impacts across design and construction stages.

    AGS Chair’s blog September 2024: key geotechnical and sustainability takeaways
    Geotechnical
    7 months ago

    AGS Chair’s blog September 2024: key geotechnical and sustainability takeaways

    AGS’s September issue centres on Fugro’s move to cut single‑use plastic in site investigation by recycling core liners, alongside guidance on structuring Employee Networks to support both staff and business performance. A new EC7 Next Gen bitesize guide stresses that BS EN 1991:2023 must be used to correctly apply FprEN 1997:2024 when assigning geotechnical risk categories to structures. Practitioners are also alerted to potential environmental law changes under the Retained EU Law Act 2023 and to upcoming AGS events on EDI, groundwater in design and construction, and the 2025 London conference.

    AGS Chair’s blog January 2025: safety, NQMS and piling roadmap takeaways for ground engineers
    Geotechnical
    7 months ago

    AGS Chair’s blog January 2025: safety, NQMS and piling roadmap takeaways for ground engineers

    AGS launches new Piling and Sustainability Roadmaps and confirms renewed collaboration with the British Drilling Association to target health and safety performance across geotechnical operations. The group backs wider adoption of the National Quality Mark Scheme (NQMS) in response to regulatory concerns over investigation and reporting quality, and flags upcoming technical events on cone penetration testing (29 January 2025) and effective procurement of ground investigations (26 March 2025). An in‑person AGS Annual Conference on 1 May 2025 will focus on “The Future” of ground engineering practice.

    AGS Chair’s blog March 2025: safety, EC7 ground models and CPD notes for engineers
    Geotechnical
    7 months ago

    AGS Chair’s blog March 2025: safety, EC7 ground models and CPD notes for engineers

    AGS’s March issue centres on women’s safety and wellbeing in geotechnics, including profiles of SiLC’s female leads and reflections on basic PPE gaps such as safety boots not available in smaller sizes. Technical content covers EC7-compliant ground model construction, Net Zero-focused rolling dynamic compaction, and current constraints in professional indemnity insurance identified by the Loss Prevention Working Group. Forthcoming CPD includes an April webinar on effective procurement of ground investigations and a May in-person Annual Conference themed “The Future”, with an early-career workplace innovation poster competition and networking reception.

    AGS Chair’s blog November 2025: safety data and skills pipeline for ground engineers
    Geotechnical
    7 months ago

    AGS Chair’s blog November 2025: safety data and skills pipeline for ground engineers

    AGS Magazine’s November 2025 issue focuses on analytical challenges in interpreting historical soil data, material management plans, and a rise in environmental disputes affecting geotechnical and geoenvironmental projects. The edition publishes the 2024 Geotechnical & Geoenvironmental Industry Accident Statistics, giving sector-wide safety performance data to benchmark site practices and risk controls. Early-career initiatives feature strongly, with an AGS Early Careers Poster Competition on “Top Five Industry Insights” and promotion of the Ground Forum Undergraduate Mentoring Programme for structured mentoring of future ground engineers.

    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    Rocchetta Tunnel progress: excavation and programme risk notes for rail engineers

    Excavation on the 2.6km Rocchetta Tunnel on the Apice–Hirpinia section of the Naples–Bari high-speed, high-capacity railway has reached a key stage with completion of the first tube’s full-face advance. The contractor, using conventional drill-and-blast with systematic pre-support in variable Apennine geology, is now shifting resources to the second tube while maintaining parallel works on the tunnel invert and final lining. Progress on this mixed-face tunnel will drive programme risk for adjacent cut-and-cover sections, portal stabilisation and trackbed formation.

    Congo copper‑cobalt mine bridge collapse: failure lessons for engineers and HSE teams
    Mining
    7 months ago

    Congo copper‑cobalt mine bridge collapse: failure lessons for engineers and HSE teams

    Un effondrement de pont dans une mine de cuivre-cobalt en République démocratique du Congo a fait au moins 32 morts, la structure s’étant rompue alors que des travailleurs et des véhicules étaient en train de la franchir. L’incident s’est produit dans un couloir minier en activité, où le pont assurait un accès essentiel au-dessus d’un chenal de roulage ou de drainage, et les équipes de secours sont encore en train de récupérer les corps et d’évaluer la stabilité des terrassements adjacents. Cette défaillance soulève des questions immédiates concernant la capacité portante du pont, la gestion de la corrosion et de la fatigue, ainsi que les conditions de soutènement géotechnique dans les infrastructures minières fortement sollicitées par le trafic.

    Infrastructure
    7 months ago

    Hamilton bus facility ground improvement: design lessons for project teams

    Ground improvement for the City of Hamilton’s new bus maintenance and storage facility was redesigned by Keller after differing ground conditions were discovered during construction. Keller replaced the original foundation concept with an alternative scheme using ground improvement techniques tailored to variable subsurface conditions, avoiding extensive deep foundations and programme delays. The solution allowed the large-footprint depot structure and hardstand areas to be supported on improved ground, controlling settlement while keeping construction within the city’s budget constraints.

    Khanh Le Pass slope failure: geotechnical lessons and design notes for engineers
    Hazards
    7 months ago

    Khanh Le Pass slope failure: geotechnical lessons and design notes for engineers

    A major landslide on the 33‑kilometre Khanh Le Pass in central Viet Nam buried a passenger bus late on Sunday, killing six people and injuring 19. The mountain road, cut into steep terrain with deeply weathered residual soils, is already known for frequent rockfalls and debris slides during intense rainfall. The incident highlights urgent needs for detailed slope stability assessment, improved drainage, and engineered protection measures such as retaining structures, rockfall barriers, and real‑time monitoring on this and similar high‑risk corridors.

    2025 geomagnetic storm: operational risk notes for geotechnical project teams
    Hazards
    7 months ago

    2025 geomagnetic storm: operational risk notes for geotechnical project teams

    A severe geomagnetic storm forecast for mid-November 2025, rated G4–G5 and driven by multiple coronal mass ejections, is prompting grid operators to pre-emptively isolate selected high-voltage transmission circuits to protect large transformers while keeping consumer supply stable. Induced geomagnetically driven currents in long conductors threaten high‑latitude power networks, with likely temporary shutdowns or derating as protection relays trip on rapid voltage and frequency fluctuations. Satellite-based GPS, high‑frequency radio and mobile networks may suffer timing errors and intermittent loss, stressing geotechnical operations that depend on precise positioning, remote monitoring and emergency communications.

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