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They discuss the roles of standardisation and componentisation in meeting future healthcare needs with new technology, as well as the evolution of Integrated Project Delivery (IPD).. Click the 'play button' above to listen in, or read our 5 Key Takeaways from Zig Rubel's episode below.... 1.
The project predicts a 9.5% reduction in capital cost and 13% reduction in programme..Carbon reduction against baseline.

The path to a sustainable future.. With the growing interest in net zero buildings and sustainable construction, Bryden Wood have developed and implemented their own hierarchy to reduce both operational and embodied carbon.These hierarchies define the roadmap to achieve good and best practice performance targets defined by bodies such as LETI, RIBA or GLA.An essential part of the hierarchy, and one of the key focuses of Bryden Wood’s design approach is DfMA, which enables substantial embodied carbon reduction and creates synergies to further reduce operational carbon.

The implementation of DfMA combined with energy efficiency measures, specification of low carbon materials and carbon offset measures is the proposed pathway to the delivery of successful net zero carbon buildings.. To learn more about our Design to Value approach to design and construction, sign up for our monthly newsletter here:.http://bit.ly/BWNewsUpdatesBased on a conversation with Phil Langley and Maria Mamoura, Directors of Bryden Wood's Creative Technologies team.. Where is the value in ‘construction technology’, ‘generative design’ or ‘automation in construction’?

With design automation and construction tech set to transform the industry, where does the Creative Technologies team at Bryden Wood fit in?
What's your driving purpose?.West Port & Co’s office is on the outside of the building where they have the most London of views: the concrete underside of the Westway, a bus depot filled with bright red, double-decker buses, and the railway tracks that will eventually be home to The Elizabeth Line.
‘It’s actually a really quiet environment,’ Obinna Ihejetoh says, ‘we always forget we’re under the Westway.’.Shaun and Khalifa also live locally in Primrose Hill and Kensal Rise so benefit from short commutes.
‘The location is not your typical Farringdon creative space, but for me, that’s a bonus.It’s a bit more subdued,’ Obinna Ihejetoh says, ’it feels more real, a bit more like London.’ I ask them about their favourite aspect of the building and in addition to the atrium and cafe, it’s actually a detail that’s a real nod from one architect to another…‘I love the view as you walk down the canal and the building is warped into the Westway,’ says Shaun.