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Guild of Travel Management Companies
Posted on: 29 April 2014
By: mackene
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Filed under: News
The GTMC represents a diverse range of travel management companies, from the world’s largest to small independent specialists and from major London-based organisations to top regional agencies. A key activity of the GTMC is to lobby all those that have an impact on the business travel of members’ clients, be they travel suppliers, Government or EU legislators, opinion formers or the media. The main aim of the GTMC’s activities is to provide a better deal for organisations and their travelling employees.
State of Trade Survey: 1st quarter 2014
Posted on: 29 April 2014
By: mackene
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The latest State of Trade Survey from the Federation of Master Builders. It warns that the economic recovery in the SME construction sector is under threat from rising building costs and material shortages.
Chartered Institute of Marketing Construction Industry Group
Posted on: 29 April 2014
By: mackene
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CIMCIG works on behalf of members to raise the status of the marketing profession within the construction industry. It is the forum for members to share knowledge, skills, information and best practice.
Turning houses into gold: the failure of British planning
Posted on: 28 April 2014
By: mackene
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Britain’s crisis of housing affordability is nothing to do with foreign speculators, according to Professor Paul Cheshire. The author, from the LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance, suggests that it is a result of decades of misguided planning policies that constrain the supply of land. He adds that houses have been converted from places in which to live into people’s most important financial asset. Professor Cheshire also considers the social and environmental benefits of greenbelts.
Architects regulation and the Architects Registration Board: call for evidence
Posted on: 28 April 2014
By: mackene
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This document provides background information to support the online call for evidence questionnaire on architects regulation and the Architects Registration Board.
Tackling poverty through public procurement
Posted on: 28 April 2014
By: mackene
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A new report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation claims that placing a requirement on contractors to undertake targeted recruitment and training would generate many additional job-with-training opportunities for people entering the labour market. It argues that by linking this to existing apprenticeship, training and job-search provisions, it could be done at little extra cost.
Neighbourhood Planning Hub
Posted on: 28 April 2014
By: mackene
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The Neighbourhood Planning Hub is an online space where people developing a Neighbourhood Plan and engaging in neighbourhood planning can network together, share ideas and gain peer to peer support.
Shedding light: a survey of local authority approaches to lighting in England
Posted on: 28 April 2014
By: mackene
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The Campaign to Protect Rural England has published a report which is described as the first research to survey councils specifically on how they control light pollution. As a result of the research CPRE is calling for councils to do more to control lighting in their areas. The report makes nine recommendations including: preserving dark skies by having a presumption against new lighting in existing dark areas; allocating lighting zones to help determine where streetlights should and should not go; and preventing inappropriate and badly designed lighting of development that masks views of the night sky.
Urban renewal after the Berlin Wall
Posted on: 28 April 2014
By: mackene
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Urban renewal areas are popular but empirically understudied spatial planning instruments designed to prevent urban decline and induce renewal. The authors of this report use a quasi-experimental research design to study the effects of 22 renewal areas implemented in Berlin, Germany, to increase housing and living quality in the aftermath of the city’s division during the Cold War period.
Gone with the wind: Valuing the visual impacts of wind turbines through house prices
Posted on: 28 April 2014
By: mackene
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This report, from the LSE’s Spatial Economics Research Centre, provides quantitative evidence on the local benefits and costs of wind farm developments in England and Wales, focusing on their visual environmental impacts. In the tradition of studies in environmental, public and urban economics, housing costs are used to reveal local preferences for views of wind farm developments.
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