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Construction News is the leading provider of UK construction industry news, opinion, analysis and events. Founded in 1871, the Construction News celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2021.

CN runs a full programme of annual face-to-face and online events including conferences, award ceremonies, webinars, roundtables and more. We bring contractors, suppliers and clients together to share knowledge, best practice and other industry insight. We honour excellence in the industry through our awards events, which are judged by independent panels.

The magazine was first published as Labour News on 30 August 1871, under founder, Victorian reformer Alsager Hay Hill, aimed at tackling unemployment by printing information about job vacancies. It was first published under its current name during the 1960s.

Today it publishes news on topics impacting the UK construction industry, including sustainability, skills shortages, materials prices, workforce diversity, legal commentary, deep-dive analysis, administrations and contract wins.

When is MMC not MMC? When it’s measured by PMV

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Colin Hamilton is head of MMC and sector director for health at ISG I’m no fan of a proliferation of acronyms, but there’s a serious point to this headline, which is around basic clarity and understanding – and more significantly about the future direction and reputation of the construction industry.…

It’s an election year – how should the industry respond?

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Kenneth Wood is managing director of construction and real estate consultancy Drees & Sommer UK Anyone still mindful that expert pollsters made the wrong calls on both the outcome of the Brexit referendum and winner of the Donald Trump vs Hillary Clinton presidential election might be tempted to look to…

We must get out and promote this great industry

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Paul Gandy is chief executive at Tilbury Douglas, vice president of the Chartered Institute of Building and serves on the board of Build UK as a contractor director As we enter a new year, it is a great time to take stock and think about the key priorities the construction industry…

The Building Safety Act: three things to watch out for in 2024

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Mark Lawrence is a partner at law firm Macfarlanes The Building Safety Act 2022 was the government’s long-awaited legislative response to the Grenfell Tower fire. It forms part of a wider package of regulatory and practical reform aimed at making high-risk residential buildings safer and ensuring that the responsibilities of…

The big legal questions for construction in 2024

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Chris Doran and Daniel Barchet are partners at law firm Weightmans In 2023, the construction industry demonstrated strong resilience in the face of persistent pressure, economic fluctuation and a flurry of transformational legislative changes – leaving the industry rife with uncertainty that will likely persist as we head into the…

2024: a year set to be frozen by politics

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Graham Harle is chief executive of Gleeds Worldwide As we bid farewell to another year, I always look forward to seeing which words the various dictionaries select to sum up the preceding 12 months. I felt Collins’ choice of ‘permacrisis’ was particularly apt in 2022, the year of post-Covid economic…

NABERS, circularity and the metaverse: what consultants predict

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Andrew Parkin is global head of acoustics and chair of the Cundall Futures Group at multidisciplinary engineering and design consultancy Cundall Change is something the built environment has struggled with, but as an industry we need to accept that it is inevitable. As net-zero carbon drives the agenda, consultancies and…

Reflecting on a turbulent year

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Peter Johnson is founder of cladding specialist the Vivalda Group ‌2023 was a year of unexpected announcements. First, we saw sobering trading updates on consecutive days from two well-known FTSE 250-listed building materials distributors, both admitting that sustained hikes in interest rates were having a negative impact on turnover and…

What are liquidated and ascertained damages?

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Harry King is a junior associate at law firm Quigg Golden Liquidated damages, also known as liquidated and ascertained damages (LADs), are a contractual agreement on damages that are designed to cover costs when a project runs past the agreed completion date. LADs are common in construction, as they provide…