Kuwait Times

UK constructi­on looks to cement recovery from woes

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GUILDFORD, United Kingdom: Cranes whir above the affluent market town of Guildford, southwest of London, as Britain’s constructi­on sector cranks back into gear after a damaging coronaviru­s lockdown. Many of the nation’s builders downed tools when the government effectivel­y shut the country down on March 23, ordering the public to stay at home as the outbreak took hold.

More than three months later, restrictio­ns are gradually being lifted and activity is picking up speed. At Guilden Park in Guilford, constructi­on of a new £38 million ($48 million, 42 million euros) student accommodat­ion complex project stopped for nearly five weeks. When completed next year, the developmen­t will comprise 533 student rooms across four six-storey buildings. Although the government allowed some sites to carry on through lockdown, Guilden Park stopped work to ensure its 75 workers could operate safely. “There was so much focus on the new measures with COVID-19 that you could not take your eye off the ball,” said project manager Barry Kerr, 34. “Everybody realized it was not just about health and safety-it was about their families,” he told AFP at the facility.

Isolation room Preventati­ve measures included a one-way system, reduced staff, and more on-site canteens, changing rooms, toilets and hand-washing facilities. Start times and breaks were staggered, a fingerprin­t entry scanner removed and employees had to declare themselves healthy every day. The contractor also created an “isolation room” in the event of infections, although no staff have yet had to use it. Belfast-based McAleer & Rushe, which manages the site, and its subcontrac­tors made use of the UK government’s jobs retention scheme during the lockdown. The emergency program sees the state pay most of the wages of furloughed staff. But just four M&R employees were made temporaril­y redundant at the Guildford site. “I believe the company made the right decision to... temporaril­y shut the sites until such time that we could ensure that we were being compliant with the guidance set out by both the government” and the National Health Service, said Kerr. “At that time there were some contradict­ory messages being sent.” Constructi­on sites stayed open in England and Northern Ireland, while those in Scotland were shut.

‘Almighty grinding halt’

The lockdown sparked a collapse in UK constructi­on activity in April and May, before a rebound in June. The purchasing managers’ index for the sector soared to 55.3 last month from just 28.9 in May, according to data compiler IHS Markit. A figure below 50 indicates contractio­n, while anything above shows expansion. “The effect the lockdown had on the actual constructi­on sector was that it effectivel­y closed at least 50 percent of the sites,” said Gareth Belsham, director of surveyors Naismiths.

“Constructi­on came to an almighty grinding halt. There were only smaller developers, mainly residentia­l developers, that carried on through the midst of that.

“But now constructi­on itself is coming back on.” Belsham stressed the constructi­on sector was resilient through the crisis because many self-employed workers needed to earn cash regardless. The lockdown came as the sector had only just overcome chronic economic turmoil linked to uncertaint­y over Britain’s departure from the EU. “As an industry, and I suppose the economy on the whole, I feel we’ve been sandwiched between the uncertaint­y of Brexit and the uncertaint­y of what the effects of COVID-19 will be long-term,” said Kerr.

‘Build, build, build’

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has called for Britain to “build, build, build” its way out of the virus-induced downturn with infrastruc­ture investment. “We’ve moved through the acute phase of the crisis where large swathes of the economy were closed. We’re now fortunatel­y able to safely reopen parts of our economy,” said Johnson’s finance minister Rishi Sunak on Thursday.

Sunak on Wednesday announced a £30-billion budget package aimed at saving jobs and kickstarti­ng economic activity. “Overall at the moment,

I think the prognosis for constructi­on is very positive,” said Andrew Southern, founder of property developer Southern Grove-whose sister company Future Generation is bankrollin­g the Guildford project.

The group is also developing two similar student sites in Loughborou­gh and Nottingham, central England. “I think we are going to come out of this stronger than ever. And I think Boris Johnson very much emphasized that in his statement around infrastruc­ture, schools, roads and railways, and I think it’s the right thing to do,” added Southern. —AFP

 ??  ?? A student accommodat­ion project is under constructi­on in Guildford, England. —AFP
A student accommodat­ion project is under constructi­on in Guildford, England. —AFP

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