Filtering by: Futurebuild

Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #5: Reality check – the energy, water, air and soil on which we depend
Oct
27
12:00 PM12:00

Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #5: Reality check – the energy, water, air and soil on which we depend

How should the ‘elements’ respond to our 3 questions on

i) what are we learning from our time of lockdown and beyond to change both as individuals and professionals?

ii) What do we keep and what do we change in the industry?

iii) If we embrace change, what is our vision for the future? If we don’t, what are the risks?

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Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #4: What is the future of work: WfH or WfO?
Oct
20
12:00 PM12:00

Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #4: What is the future of work: WfH or WfO?

What does it mean in terms of home work spaces and home design? Will many existing office buildings become stranded assets? Will we demand that the buildings we occupy are healthier? What will be the re-use of vacant office space? Will we reject tall towers with dependence on confined spaces i.e. lifts, and mechanical air handling systems. Will we insist on nearby open spaces? Is it time for a rethink on the future of work?

How should ‘work’ respond to our 3 questions on

i) what are we learning from our time of lockdown and beyond to change both as individuals and professionals?

ii) What do we keep and what do we change in the industry?

iii) If we embrace change, what is our vision for the future? If we don’t, what are the risks?

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Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #3: Cities must serve their citizens fully and vice versa
Oct
13
12:00 PM12:00

Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #3: Cities must serve their citizens fully and vice versa

This session will consider the economic, social and physical conditions to enable cities to serve their citizens fully.

How should ‘cities’ respond to our 3 questions on

i) what are we learning from our time of lockdown and beyond to change both as individuals and professionals?

ii) What do we keep and what do we change in the industry?

iii) If we embrace change, what is our vision for the future? If we don’t, what are the risks?

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Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #2: Infrastructure Action Plan – in place now!
Oct
6
12:00 PM12:00

Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #2: Infrastructure Action Plan – in place now!

How should ‘infrastructure’ respond to our 3 questions on

i) what are we learning from our time of lockdown and beyond to change both as individuals and professionals?

ii) What do we keep and what do we change in the industry?

iii) If we embrace change, what is our vision for the future? If we don’t, what are the risks?

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Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #1: Systems change in the construction industry now!
Sep
29
12:00 PM12:00

Edge x Futurebuild: Learning from Disruption Webinar #1: Systems change in the construction industry now!

It is time for systems change for the construction industry – what will you do?

How should we address our 3 questions on i) what are we learning from our time of lockdown and beyond to change both as individuals and professionals? ii) What do we keep and what do we change in the industry? iii) If we embrace change, what is our vision for the future? If we don’t, what are the risks?

The proposition put forward in this session is that construction needs a cultural change, and a reinvention if we are to play our part in mitigating climate change. We will explore what this could mean in practice.

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Edge Debate #99 - Futurebuild NOW Webinar 2: "Collaboration to achieve 100% Net Zero Carbon"
Apr
30
12:30 PM12:30

Edge Debate #99 - Futurebuild NOW Webinar 2: "Collaboration to achieve 100% Net Zero Carbon"

In this session we are focusing on the big issue of how to achieve collaboration at the larger scale of getting the whole industry to embrace common goals, of which the most critical is responding to climate change, with institutions and other organisations working together to define these and help their members with the tools to deliver.

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Apr
21
12:30 PM12:30

Edge Debate #98 - Futurebuild NOW Webinar #1: "Collaboration"

The legal requirement to achieve net zero carbon by 2050 (and the science tells us that we actually need to do this well before), should focus the minds of all working in the built and natural environment where construction can have an influence. There is an essential need for collaboration in all areas of work – integration of information, innovation and process during the briefing, planning, designing, manufacturing, constructing, operating and maintaining a construction projects.

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Mar
7
1:30 PM13:30

Edge @ Futurebuild 2019 #5 Rebel Leadership

The Challenge to Achieve Real Change

Are you ready for a paradigm shift to achieve and future and live in a world we want to live in?

As Kirsten Henson, sustainability consultant and speaker in this session, has written: “We are running out of time in our fight against planetary destruction…add to this the increasing frustration against the lack of opportunity for social mobility, unequal access to education and healthcare and it is not surprising that people are starting to call for a different type of leadership - new disruptive business and economic models are required to create a paradigm shift.”

A paradigm shift is certainly needed if we are to achieve a future and live in a world that we would want to live in.

We will invite the audience to contribute their own suggestions and by the session end we will identify three key recommendations as the most universally applicable.

This session was developed by the Ecobuild Conference at Futurebuild together with Louise Clarke of Berkeley Homes and Julie Godefroy of Julie Godefroy Sustainability and the Edge

Chair: 
Professor Peter Guthrie - University of Cambridge

Speakers: 
Lowri Bond - Igloo Regeneration
Kirsten Henson - KLH Sustainability
Ben Smith - ARUP & National Park City
Omer Kutluoglu - Yes Recycling

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Mar
6
3:00 PM15:00

Edge @ Futurebuild 2019 #4 The Housing Challenge

More Than Houses

Land valuation, home ownership, family living: such historic and cultural practices are being thrown into question by the housing crisis.

Why have we still got a ‘housing crisis’ in the 21st century? ‘Solving’ this complex issue calls for more than a succession of government targets for numbers of new homes to be built each year; the industry also needs to raise its ambition and innovate. So how can we really ensure that we build the right homes in the right places at the right price for the right people? The government has scrapped the cap on how much councils can borrow to build new homes, which is welcome. James Brokenshire, as Secretary of State for the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (MHCLG), has expressed the government’s commitment to “building the right number of homes in the right places” and is appointing a ‘New Homes Ombudsman’, although this appears to encourage and support home ownership.

But many questions remain to be answered:
- Should anyone be ‘homeless’ in the 21st century? This may be an extreme expression of inequality, but we cannot escape the overall inequality of our social structure.
- Does our cultural attitude to home ownership suggest that renting your home is a sign of failure and so put pressure on the ‘need to buy’, despite unrealistically high prices?
- How are we addressing changing demographics with more single person households, and catering for groups such as elderly people, who may have varying needs for homes and place?
- What are our new housing models in today’s housing landscape of private developers, local authorities and housing associations?
- How can land be valued for the benefit of the wider community (including the provision of high quality social facilities) instead of being a lottery based on hope value and scarcity?
- How do we ensure that ‘affordable housing’ is affordable when the cost of housing seems to have become detached from earnings?
- How can we raise our ambition and ensure that all our citizens have safe and affordable housing in line with SDG 11, with access to sustainable transport and employment?
- Should we also improve protection for tenants, as is available in many European countries?
- How can we ensure quality both of building and place, not just quantity of dwellings?
- Do we need a comprehensive national and regional spatial plan?
- Is it time to rethink ‘housing’?

This session will explore the issues and we will invite the audience to contribute their own suggestions. By the session end we will identify three key recommendations as the most universally applicable.

This session was developed with the Ecobuild Conference at Futurebuild

Chair: 
Jane Briginshaw, Director, Design England

Speakers: 
Paul Chatterton - University of Leeds & author of Unlocking Sustainable Cities A Manifesto for Real Change
Heather Cheesbrough - Croydon Council
Jon Sawyer - Manchester City Council
Susan J Smith - University of Cambridge

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Mar
6
1:30 PM13:30

Edge @ Futurebuild 2019 #3 The Future Practice Challenge

Connecting education, research, practice and professionalism.

Reinforcing the connections between education, skills, research and professional standards to develop the future workforce we need.

If we want a sustainable built environment we need to ensure that we can deliver this through a competent, and especially environmentally competent, workforce. We need a positive vision to attract a workforce for the future. Education, skills, research and professionals standards are, or should be, closely interwoven. We need to inspire in our courses from professional education to skills training and apprenticeships, disseminate relevant research to provide an evidence base for decision making and ensure that our professional standards are taken seriously as an asset, not an obstacle. This session will explore these challenges to see how we can do better.

We will invite the audience to contribute their own suggestions and by the session end we will identify three key recommendations as the most universally applicable.

This session was developed with the Ecobuild Conference at Futurebuild.

Chair:
Sunand Prasad PPRIBA – Penoyre & Prasad

Speakers: 
Flora Samuel - University of Reading & Vice President for Research RIBA
Dr Emma Wilcox - CEO Society for the Environment
Simon Foxell - The Architects Practice & author of Professionalism for the Built Environment
Alexander Wright - University of Bath

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Mar
6
12:00 PM12:00

Edge @ Futurebuild 2019 #2 The Environment Challenge

How can we enhance the environment in a post-Brexit world?

How environmental protections can and should be strengthened and enhanced in post-Brexit Britain.

There are some critical questions around resources, such as water and soil, which will be fundamental to future environmental sustainability and will need protection, conservation and improvement. The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) Commission for Economic Justice report ‘Prosperity and Justice: A Plan for a new Economy’ stated that, “Environmental sustainability must be at the heart of economic policy.” So when the government makes the pledge, “to make ours the first generation to leave the natural environment in a better state than we found it,” there is a great deal at stake for the future of the UK. Will natural capital accounting help to protect the environment or should we recognise that we cannot value everything in monetary terms? When the Prime Minister launched the government’s 25 Year Environment Plan she confirmed that, “We will use the opportunity Brexit provides to strengthen and enhance our environmental protections – not to weaken them. The EU Withdrawal Act (2018) required the setting up of an independent ‘watchdog’ to hold the government to account, and this was debated extensively throughout the Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA) consultation on Environmental Principles and Governance. The government has now proposed an Environment Act, which should provide legal underpinning for the 25 Year Environment Plan. How can we influence the Environment Act? Is there the necessary cross-departmental support and resources to give the act the breadth it needs to be truly effective? This session highlights SDGs 2, 6, 13, 14 and 15.

We will invite the audience to contribute their own suggestions and by the session end we will identify three key recommendations as the most universally applicable.

This session was developed with the Ecobuild Conference at Futurebuild and IEMA

Chair: 
Eloise Scotford - University College London

Speakers: 
Maddy Thimont-Jack - Institute for Government
Martin Baxter - Institute of Environmental Management and Assessment (IEMA)
Alastair Chisholm - Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management (CIWEM)
Ece Ozdemiroglu – eftec & Member of the Committee on Climate Change

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Mar
5
12:00 PM12:00

Edge @ Futurebuild 2019 #1 The Construction Leadership Challenge

Delivering on the ambitions of the £420m Sector Deal

Applying innovative technology and techniques to deliver homes, major buildings and infrastructure and transform our industry under the Construction Sector Deal.

The Construction Sector Deal policy paper was published by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) and the Construction Leadership Council (CLC) in July 2018. This stated, “The construction sector reaches every corner of the United Kingdom and touches each of our lives. We are in the early days of one of the greatest construction programmes in our history, from delivering more homes that people can afford, in the places they want to live, to major infrastructure projects…the pace of this change, and the size of this opportunity, demands a construction sector that is the best in the world.”

The programme is very ambitious with a joint sector-government budget of £420 million to invest in new technology and techniques. The Construction Leadership Council is building on the Sector Deal’s strategic principles of Digital, Manufacturing and Whole-life Performance through a series of cross-industry groups. The CLC’s ‘Procuring for Value’ report makes practical, long-term recommendations for both government and industry to facilitate change. This is a subject that should be central to the work of all those engaged in the built environment at a time when we need to restore confidence in the construction industry, and relates particularly to SDGs 9,11 and 12.

We will invite the audience to contribute their own suggestions and by the session end we will identify three key recommendations as the most universally applicable.

This session was developed with the Ecobuild Conference at Futurebuild.

Chair: 
Andy Mitchell - Construction Leadership Council & CEO Thames Tideway

Speakers: 
Ann Bentley - RLB & Construction Leadership Council,
Sam Stacey - UK Research and Innovation (UKRI),
Peter Caplehorn - Construction Products Association,
Lynne Sullivan - LSA Studio, Good Homes Alliance & Green Construction Board,
Julia Barrett - Willmott Dixon

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