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Term time schedule

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Closed for lunch 12pm - 1pm each day

Closed all day Saturday and Sunday and bank holidays

Visit the School

The Project Support Centre is located in the School of Architecture and the Built Environment at the University of Westminster.

Visit the School of Architecture and the Built Environment

Financial support for energy efficiency in buildings

Posted on: 9 March 2012
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The European Commission has recently launched a public consultation on financial support needed for the uptake of energy-efficiency improvements in buildings. The recast Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) requires member states, amongst others, to provide for appropriate financing and other instruments to incentivise large-scale energy-efficiency refurbishments and the transition to nearly zero-energy buildings.

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Community-led planning toolkit

Posted on: 9 March 2012
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Action with Communities in Rural England has published a second edition of its toolkit which provides step by step guidance for communities who want to produce a holistic plan that will improve the wellbeing and sustainability of their neighbourhood. The toolkit outlines 9 steps that communities should take to produce plans that are well researched, inclusive and achieve the actions they propose.

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London’s World Heritage Sites: Guidance on settings

Posted on: 9 March 2012
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The Mayor of London has published Supplementary Planning Guidance to ensure a more consistent interpretation of setting and understanding of their importance in contributing to an appreciation of Outstanding Universal Value to help support consistency in decision making to conserve the World Heritage Sites’ Outstanding Universal Value, integrity, authenticity and significance.

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Beyond bricks and mortar boards: universities and the future of regional economic development

Posted on: 8 March 2012
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This report is based on joint work by IPPR North and Universities UK to understand better the impact of recent changes to regional and local structures and the emerging relations between universities and regions. The report considers changes in the regional infrastructure following the demise of Regional Development Agencies, and the government’s plan for growth and other changes announced as part of the localisation agenda. These have been considered in the light of other changes to public spending and more specifically the current reforms to the higher education system. Attention is drawn in the report to the diversity of the sector and the varying roles that institutions can play within their region. The role of Local Enterprise Partnerships and how universities can participate in the new regional structure are also addressed, as are regional funding flows and the opportunities for universities in terms of civic leadership. The report also considers issues relating to business engagement, student enterprise and entrepreneurship, Regional Growth and ERDF funding, and workforce development.

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Research to support the development of a Green Deal Competency Framework

Posted on: 7 March 2012
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New research, commissioned by the Green Deal Skills Alliance (GDSA), a collaboration between Asset Skills, SummitSkills and CITB-ConstructionSkills, argues the challenge to train the built environment workforce and its learning providers for Green Deal launch this autumn is immense. The study surveyed more than 400 employers and training providers from the energy assessment, advice and construction sectors in England, Wales and Scotland, gathering views on the skills and knowledge needed to deliver the Green Deal, the government’s flagship policy for energy efficiency. Despite citing challenges in preparing industry, the report claims SMEs will be able to profit from the scheme. While most employers thought larger firms were more likely to dominate the market, they also believed real opportunities would be created for SMEs to win work through subcontracting for larger firms. Respondents also indicated the initiative had the potential to boost firms’ turnover by up to 20% and that nearly a third of the workforce did have the basic skills needed to deliver the scheme. However, there were concerns that the workforce lacked knowledge in areas such as building fabrics and the impact energy efficiency measures have on different types of buildings. Improving the skills of the workforce was still an urgent priority to ensure the Green Deal’s success.

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Green building and climate resilience: understanding impacts and preparing for changing conditions

Posted on: 7 March 2012
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A new report, released by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) and the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, describes how green buildings advance resiliency in disasters. This report represents one of the first attempts to compile all research on the impacts of climate change on the built environment in the United States and to link impacts with strategies for addressing them. It explores how climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts at all scales interact synergistically, with a focus on how green building professionals can approach adaptation in the built environment. It contains a set of specific strategies that can be used to enhance resilience and provide adaptive benefits, including ‘no-regrets’ strategies which aim to generate social and/or economic benefits whether or not climate change occurs. The information and strategies presented in the report provide a solid baseline from which green building professionals can begin to address climate change adaptation in their projects.

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Adaptation and Resilience to a Changing Climate Coordination Network UKCIP Annual Report 2011

Posted on: 7 March 2012
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The Adaptation and Resilience to a Changing Climate Coordination Network (ARCCCN) has now evolved into a mature network of researchers and stakeholders focussing on the built environment and infrastructure sectors. There is active participation from 18 multi-disciplinary research teams involving 35 academic institutions, over 200 researchers and a wide variety of stakeholders from central and local government, business and industry. Working together through network activities, this community is providing evidence to enable the design of urban systems that are more resilient to climate change thus benefitting national economic stability and well-being. Key achievements across the network in 2011 are included in the latest annual report.

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Corporate real estate: investment and global cities

Posted on: 6 March 2012
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This paper represents a scoping exercise among some of RICS’ key stakeholders through a number of global discussion forums. Between late 2011 and early 2012 RICS convened a number of roundtable discussions in a selection of cities in which it operates. Participants at each city discussion included a combination of senior management of  major corporate occupiers (e.g. Directors of Property, Heads of Real Estate), service providers (often RICS members) from real estate firms and other property professionals. The participants based their discussions on the same set of topics, which included: why they chose to locate in that specific city/city-region; their city’s relationship with the rest of the country and region; whether there were any real market constraints to locating in the city; existing or emerging best practice in the way that real estate service providers were working with occupiers in that location. Each city page in this report includes a set of economic and demographic data to provide a wider context to the anecdotal evidence.

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In sight of the finishing line: A review of the preparations to stage a sustainable Games

Posted on: 6 March 2012
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The Commission for Sustainable London has published a report which reviews London 2012′s preparations to meet the time-critical sustainability challenges facing the organisers of the ‘most sustainable Games to date’. The review has focused on the mechanics of delivery that will be needed at Games-time to ensure that sustainability commitments are met.

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Olympic cities and advanced city-making: Part 1

Posted on: 6 March 2012
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Through a series of blogs, Brent Toderian, Planning Director for Vancouver over 4 years of preparation preceding the last Olympics, aims to share his observations on the city-building challenges and legacies from the Vancouver and Calgary Olympic Games, as well as his indirect observations from London and past host cities like Barcelona, Sydney, and Montreal. He will consider the debates on whether hosting the Olympics is a good or bad thing for a city, the lessons from cities that have done it successfully, and maybe even some observations from cities that benefited from going after the Games, and not getting them.

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