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STONE DIGITAL: Stone in a low carbon, digitized world

2022-02-28

With the UK committed to Net Zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, stone, as a zero carbon raw material, has a natural advantage over other building materials. Stone Digital was a ground-breaking event for the industry to spread that message.

In a world committed to reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions a raw material like stone that has a zero carbon footprint should have a natural advantage. But the fragmented industry that supplies dimensional stone products lacks the multi-billion pound international companies of sectors such as concrete, steel and glass to champion its cause. As a result, its message can be hard to hear amid the clamour of every other sector to emphasise their green credentials.

It is amazing how, given a sufficient budget, a concrete company’s claim to have cut its carbon emissions by 30% can sound more impressive than a stone company’s message that its products always have been low carbon.

The Stone Digital – Shaping a Sustainable Future conference held online on 22 & 23 February was a ground-breaking attempt by the stone industry to get its message heard.

And with a good measure of success, with some 845 people getting involved on the days. It is expected the number who watch the presentations will top the 1,000 mark now recordings are available on catch-up at  bit.ly/SD-on-demand.

The Stone Digital event was staged by the organisers of the Natural Stone Show & Hard Surfaces, normally held every other year at ExCeL London but, like other exhibitions around the world, cancelled because of Covid. The Natural Stone Show is due to return to ExCeL with Hard Surfaces 18-20 April next year.

Stone Digital, like the Natural Stone Show itself, was supported by this magazine as media partner and Stone Federation Great Britain, which has launched its own series of webinars called The Case for Stone to further spread stone’s message.

Stone Digital – Shaping a Sustainable Future covered a wide area of the use of stone in architecture, including new build, heritage, landscaping and interiors.

Many of the presentations also made it clear just how much the march of digitalization has accelerated during the restrictions imposed by the Covid pandemic. It was a subject specifically addressed in the final session of the eight presented during the two days of the event.

It became clear during the presentations that digitization is already playing a significant part in increasing the productivity of the stone industry and construction in general and can only take a growing role in improving communications and reducing waste going forward.

We also heard during the presentations how stone companies are reducing their carbon footprints still further – because although they are using a zero carbon raw material, there are GHG-emitting processes involved in extracting the material, processing it and transporting it.

Low energy transformation

Most of the processes involved in transforming blocks of stone into usable masonry for building and materials for flooring, surfaces, cladding, walling and hard landscaping basically involve sawing and in some cases polishing, either with electrical machinery or by hand, either of which can involve relatively low carbon energy, especially with electricity generation increasingly moving to renewable sources.

Any building material has to be moved to site, of course, and transport is a major producer of GHGs, but we heard from speakers about how this is being tackled with the use of electrically-powered vehicles and the substituting of diesel with biofuels. We heard from primary stone producers Albion Stone and Polycor that in the latest Euro Six heavy plant engines, diesel and biofuels can be used without the engines needing adjustments. Biofuels still emit CO2 but only half as much as diesel.

Nick Wilson of specialist contractor Stonewest pointed out that diesel is sometimes not allowed to be left on-site on projects overnight these days. As it is not feasible to empty the tanks of generators and machines every night and refill them in the morning, biofuels are used instead.

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Stone Digital Make Architects

Frances Gannon, a Partner at Make Architects (right), talks with Lefteris Siamopoulos, Senior Façade Consultant at FMDC (left), and Darren Anderson, Director & Stone Consultant at FMDC, during the opening session of the Stone Digital conference.

Stone Digital began with Simon Sturgis, the founder of Targeting Zero, setting the scene by putting global warming into context. He explained that for the past 800,000 years the CO2 level in the air has fluctuated between 200 and 300 parts per million (ppm) in roughly 100,000 year cycles of ice ages and warmer periods.

However, since 1780, the start of the industrial revolution, that level has been rising at an unprecedented rate and has now reached 418ppm. That is blamed for the temperature of the earth already having increased by 1ºC above the pre-industrial level.

That, in turn, is blamed for changes in weather patterns that have led to forest fires, floods and increasingly ferocious gales, which is why countries around the world are working together under the Paris Agreement to keep global warming to below 2ºC above the pre-industrial level, and preferably at no more than 1.5ºC.

In the UK, the government has committed  to reducing the level of carbon emissions to 100% below the 1990 base-line and be 68% towards that target by 2030. That requires action by everyone, both in their business and private lives.

Dr Flavie Lowres, who used to work at the BRE but in October last year set up her own business called Green Thinking and also works for the Alliance for Sustainable Building Products as an embodied carbon advisor, explained how schemes such as BREEAM, for classifying the environmental impact of buildings, could help cut the carbon footprint of the built environment.

Frances Gannon, a Partner at Make Architects, led a discussion with Lefteris Siamopoulos and Darren Anderson from FMDC, a façades and materials design consultancy. They have analysed the carbon footprint of building materials because, as Darren said, “it’s assumptions that are dangerous”.

They agreed natural stone is a gift, with zero embodied carbon and sustainable because the crust of the planet on which we live is stone. Darren said: “In terms of reserves in the world, it’s calculated there are sufficient reserves for millions of years to come.”

He said Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) are the equivalent of nutrition values (calories, salt, sugar and so on) shown on food. Clients and specifiers are expecting to see EPDs on building materials.

During the following two days of Stone Digital there was much talk and many examples of the sustainable use of stone, including its contribution to a circular economy through its re-use.

Nick Wilson, a Director of specialist contractor Stonewest, spoke about how Stonewest was re-using stone in retained façades, which could involve reducing the thickness of the stone for re-attachment to a new building in the same location. The stone removed would be stored and re-used, either in other areas of the same building or on other buildings.

Robert Greer, a Director of specialist PAYE Stonework & Restoration, presented the case of PAYE’s reinstatement of the Aston Webb Screen at the V&A museum in London. The screen had been dismantled some years earlier and kept in storage. It was then to be rebuilt as a gated entrance.

Access was created between the columns that had previously been filled with Portland limestone. The stone that had been removed was then used as street furniture in Exhibition Road, facing the museum.

Prior to PAYE repurposing the British Portland stone for street furniture, the plan had been to use Indian granite. Re-using the Portland clearly had a lower carbon footprint than bringing stone from India, with the travel involved in driving it hundreds of miles from the quarry to the docks and then shipping it thousands of miles to London.

There was more about the use and re-use of stone in the heritage sector, where there are many stone buildings, in the session headed ‘Sustainable solutions for our built heritage’.

Because of the difficulty of transporting heavy blocks of stone in earlier centuries, historically, buildings tended to use whatever was to hand, although in the south of England that does include French limestone, especially after the Norman invasion of 1066, because it was easy to bring from France in ships and France was sometimes closer than alternative sources of stone from England.

The Building Stone Database for England

Identifying the original source of stones used in historic buildings is not always easy, but Clara Willett, Senior Building Conservation Adviser at Historic England, said help is at hand from the Building Stone Database for England, which is the final product of the Strategic Stone Study to identify quarry sites and some of the property built from the stone from those quarries.

The Strategic Stone Study entered the information gathered on a Geological Information System (GIS) map (which can be accessed free at bit.ly/buildingstone). A GIS has different layers of information that can be explored.

The map has been produced by the British Geological Survey in Nottingham, with the first information being entered in 2007 and the project being considered completed this year, when it will be launched as the Building Stone Database for England. A set of publications relating to the information gathered will be published by Historic England.

Dr Stephen Parry from the British Geological Survey provided further advice on selecting the right stone for conservation projects at Stone Digital.

The Building Stone Database for England has identified more than 4,000 quarry sites, 12,000 reference buildings and 19,000 historic stone structures, although Clara said information would continue to be added as it came to light. She said the map is widely referenced in local authority planning documents.

Planning was another aspect covered by Stone Digital, with Sam Thistlethwaite, Director of IC Planning, explaining what mandatory design codes mean for the use of natural stone and Nic Shannon, Managing Director of Domus Façades, talking about the benefits of sustainable stone cladding brought about by the recent revision of BS 8298.

Primary stone producers Albion Stone, which mines Portland limestone, and Polycor, with quarries in North America and France, spoke about their moves to reduce the already small carbon footprint of their operations.

Michael Poultney, the Managing Director of Albion Stone, said his company’s journey towards net zero had begun 25 years ago when he realised that to obtain planning permission to be able to continue to extract stone from Portland he would have to end opencast production and start mining. Since then he has obtained the environmental management standard ISO 14001 and achieved an ‘Excellent’ rating for BES 6001, the Responsible Sourcing for Construction Products standard, as well as producing an EPD.

Polycor, meanwhile, has committed to achieving Net Zero by 2025. Bryan Thorburn, Director of Business Development Europe & The Middle East, explained how the company is achieving that. In a video he showed as part of his presentation, Patrick Perus, Polycor’s Chief Executive Officer, says: “This is not corporate BS. We are doing it. We are doing it for sure. This is the future of the construction industry.”

There was a session specifically devoted to hard landscaping, with Steintec, Hardscape and Fila demonstrating how they are helping the environment and reducing their carbon emissions. They also addressed the subject of the use of stone in sustainable drainage schemes (SuDS), which is usually associated with concrete, and Steve Burton, Technical Director of Steintec, spoke about the latest version of BS 7533, published last year, with just one part (101) replacing seven parts of the standard as it was previously.

Much of the granite and sandstone used in hard landscaping comes from the Far East, a lot of it from India, where there is still modern slavery and child labour, which was another issue addressed by Stone Digital. David Richardson, Director of Diagenesis Consulting, explained how the Ethical Stone Register can help stone companies to demonstrate their efforts to tackle modern slavery.

Tamsin Pickeral, Operations Director of stone contractor Szerelmey, explained the company’s journey to the second ‘verification’ level on the Ethical Stone Register and Steve Walley, the Managing Director of London Stone, spoke about his part in the No Child Left Behind initiative to get children out of quarries and into schools.

There was talk in various sessions about returning to using stone in its traditional form as load bearing masonry, an example of which was shown by Pierre Bidaud, Creative Director of The Stonemasonry Company in Ketton, in Rutland. The Stonemasonry Company is particularly famous for its stunning staircases, but it also produces architectural stone and worked with architect Amin Taha and engineer Steve Webb to supply the structural stone exoskeleton of 15 Clerkenwell Close in Islington, London. The exoskeleton is famously constructed of blocks with sawn and split faces straight from the quarry.

Pierre Bidaud

Pierre Bidaud of The Stonemasonry Company. Behind him is one of his company’s stone staircases. He said stone can be threaded on a steel skewer, "like a stone kebab", to make use of stone that would otherwise be waste.

Pierre Bidaud: “It’s all about commodity. Stone is a commodity. Stone was used as just a pure building material. Unfortunately, in the past 30-40 years it’s been used just as a cladding, a veneer, and we believe stone should be much more than that – go back to basics and build with it.”

Stone as commodity

Pierre called on architects to accept much more variety in the stone they use, encompassing and celebrating the nature of stone rather than trying to eliminate it.

He said: “It’s all about commodity. Stone is a commodity. Stone was used as just a pure building material. Unfortunately, in the past 30-40 years... it’s been used just as a cladding, a veneer, and we believe stone should be much more than that – go back to basics and build with it.”

Pierre also showed examples of more conventional structural stone elsewhere in the world, as well as explaining the use of pre and post tensioning to create the oh-so-elegant, gravity-defying staircases The Stonemasonry Company makes.

The structural use of stone was a subject also covered by James Simpson, OBE, consultant with Simpson & Brown Architects and Chairman of the Building Limes Forum, while David Wilson, Architectural Consultant at cladding specialist Shackerley, spoke about the benefits of lightweight cladding reducing the amount of material required for the frame of buildings and so reducing the carbon footprint of the structure as a whole.

A recurring theme throughout the conference was the use of technology. For example, Dr Mohamed Abdel-Wahab, Senior Lecturer at the University of the West of Scotland, and Dr Scott McGibbon, Director of PvoTAL Consultancy, had spoken about it in terms of its benefits for the heritage building sector.

It was a subject that Stone Digital returned to as it concluded its two-day run, with Mark Dellar, Business Unit Leader of Vetter UK, talking about the connected contractor; Robert Merry, of Stone Consultants, exploring the digital route to sustainable construction; Graham Sykes, Technical Director of Architectural & Heritage Scanning, explaining how surveys using lasers, point clouds and 3D views help understand buildings; and James Weston, Plant Controller at Natural Stone Surfaces in Derbyshire, and Director David Roy explaining how they have adopted lean manufacturing from the automotive industry for the worktop market, digitally connecting templating to design, production, customer communications and installation.

Robert Merry

Robert Merry of Stone Consultants: “At the end of the day, finally and ultimately, we’re going to have to have somebody who actually fits the stone on site, and I don’t think that’s ever going to change.”

That’s just a quick run through the topics covered by the 34 speakers who contributed to Stone Digital. And we should not forget the significant contribution from Susannah Streeter, a leading broadcaster and sustainability commentator, who anchored the whole event, providing theme-setting introductions to each session and putting questions posted by the audience to the speakers after their presentations. She also led panel discussions that rounded off each session.

Hopefully this review has whetted your appetite to listen to some of the presentations. They are certainly worth your time and will help to get the stone message out into the wider construction industry, promoting the use of this inherently low carbon, sustainable material being offered by an industry playing its part in tackling global warming and improving the productivity of construction.

Graham Sykes

Graham Sykes of Architectural & Heritage Scanning: “We have used the same render techniques and the same navigation methods that are used in the gaming world for displaying 3D models.”

 

Stone Digital was sponsored by the following companies:

 

D Zambelis

Fila

Forest of Dean Stone Firms

Hardscape

Lovell Stone Group

Prodim

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Code of Practice on silica exposure adopted in Australia

2022-02-26

Australia continues to lead the way in tackling silicosis associated with working engineered quartz, with New South Wales, where a third of Australians live, having become the first state to adopt a new code of practice from Safe Work Australia, Australia’s equivalent of the Health & Safety Executive (HSE).

The code is called Managing the risks of respirable crystalline silica from engineered stone in the workplace. It contains a lot of useful information about silicosis and the risks of exposure to respirable crystalline silica dust. To download it from the New South Wales government website, click here.

The standard highlights a chain of responsibility from quartz manufacturers to end-use customers.

The code of practice was adopted by New South Wales on 25 February. The state has been particularly proactive on silicosis since an Australian government study covering the years 2006-2019 confirmed a ‘substantial increase’ of the disease among those involved in making engineered quartz worktops. There is speculation that the resin in engineered quartz somehow aggravates the condition.

Two years ago New South Wales was the first Australian state to adopt the American limit of exposure to respirable crystalline silica (RCS) of 0.05mg/m3 of air. In the UK the exposure limit is twice that.

Australian media has also focused on the debilitating effects of silicosis on fabrication workers, featuring cases of people suffering from it.

The new code of practice is intended to give employers and workers involved in worktop fabrication a clear understanding of how to cut, grind, polish and clean up safely when working with engineered stone.

The detailed guidance includes illustrations on proper working conditions, as well as the importance of regular air and worker health monitoring.

The code of practice goes beyond the fabricators by identifying the responsibilities of designers, manufacturers, importers and suppliers in reducing people’s exposure to RCS.

The adoption of the code of practice follows a campaign by Inspectors for Safe Work Australia. They carried out more than 900 compliance visits to engineered stone businesses in New South Wales as part of a broader five-year program targeting silica exposure in construction and infrastructure generally. They report that protection for employees in the industry is improving.

Silicosis is a serious and debilitating, incurable lung disease that can lead to cancer and death.

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Pallet Loop

Go green with your pallets

2022-02-25

About 18million pallets are used by the construction industry each year and currently only about 10% are re-used, says a new scheme called The Pallet Loop that aims to encourage re-use of pallets by charging a refundable deposit for them.

The Pallet Loop is on a mission to change the way pallets are used with its green (literally) pallets becoming available later this year.

Some companies, including Marshalls, Sisk, Countryside, Tobermore and the Wolseley Group, have already signed The Pallet Loop’s charter committing to at least exploring how a circular economy pallet scheme could benefit their businesses, the environment, and the UK construction industry as a whole.

The Pallet Loop’s scheme starts with the supply of its green pallets to product manufacturers, who pay a deposit per pallet plus an issue fee.

As the pallets move through the supply chain, the deposit passes down the distribution chain to the builder.

Once the products have been taken off the pallets, the pallets are stacked ready for collection, which can be arranged on The Pallet Loop website or app, or by phone, although it is going to be a least 72 hours before they are collected, which might be an issue on sites where space is tight.

There is also a collection charge, which is where the scheme might fall down, even though The Pallet Loop says it will be less than putting the pallets in a skip and is offset by the refunded deposit paid when the skips go back into the system.

Phil Dent, CEO at The Pallet Loop, says the industry has to work together on sustainability to drive change. “As we move towards the roll out of our green pallets later this year, we look forward to continuing our work with all of our signatories, wider industry stakeholders and trade associations.”

Commenting on Marshalls’ reasons for signing The Pallet Loop charter, John Davies, Sustainability Improvement Director at Marshalls PLC, says: “As well as focusing on achieving net zero by 2030, we’re always looking at ways to reduce our waste and recycle more, and a circular approach to our pallet use is something we’re very interested in exploring.”

Sarah-Jane Davies, Sustainability Manager for UK & Group Civils at John Sisk & Son Ltd, says The Pallet Loop supports the company’s strategic objective to embed circular economy principles into its operations by 2023 as part of its 2030 ‘Sustainability Roadmap’.

You can find out more about The Pallet Loop at https://www.thepalletloop.com, or email info@thepalletloop.com.

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Phil Dent, CEO at The Pallet Loop, says every year an estimated 18million pallets are manufactured for the UK construction industry and less than 10% are re-used. He wants to change that.

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A Qualified Workforce : by Mark Priestman

2022-02-25

Mark Priestman is a Director of a training consultancy whose mantra is: Qualify the Workforce! Here he reflects on the role of the CITB in achieving that.

“Intellectual growth should commence at birth and cease only at death.” Those words are attributed to Albert Einstein. But it doesn’t take an Einstein to agree. Our career, our relationships and our life itself is a continual learning curve. Of course, Einstein wasn’t confining his comment to training.

Whether we are being mentored, schooled, apprenticed, instructed… even lectured – what can we do to bring along our best game and reap the best results? And how can an employer sponsoring a learner prepare them for their personal growth, so the business achieves a dividend too?

My acronym ‘ADAPT’ might assist. 

ADAPT – Attitude

Attitude is everything. Einstein wouldn’t have been the great mind he was with bad attitude. So what is good attitude? Basically the hunger to learn. If you think you already know best it will be hard to learn more. Appetite shows curiosity to explore fuller understanding.

Think, too, how our attitude effects our mentors and teachers. We might think that’s on them, but if we enable them in return we get the best deal and they will feel inclined to foster our growth.

ADAPT – Desire

Desire is the product of hunger. We can satisfy hunger in two ways – with short term fixes or with long term gain. Fast food sustains us for moments but the benefits of wholesome food last a lot longer.

So we need to ask ourselves what it is we desire. Is our attendance on a training course simply a means to an end, to tick some box or another? Or do we desire something that will benefit us for life – growth?

ADAPT – Aims

For the learning process to be most successful we need to know what the aims are. Life is a journey and going on a journey is part of life. It might be enjoyable, but without aims, or a route plan, our efforts don’t even have a target to miss.

ADAPT – Potential

Athletes routinely visualise their goals. They do this so their journey has an aim and is more likely to hit their target. Potential is the follow on step used by elite athletes. They don’t only visualise the goal but also the consequences of achieving that goal and their potential – raising the trophy, wrapping the medal ribbon around their neck, standing on the open top bus and being admired by the crowd.

See beyond achieving the aim to how the achievement qualifies you to do something better and to open doors of further opportunity for you, your organisation and your co-workers.

ADAPT – Train

Owning learning multiplies its effectiveness. Paying forward our learning hardwires it into our consciousness and truly helps us to change our behaviour. So when you learn something of value, pass it on, share your enlightenment.

Of course, ‘sharing enlightenment’ might be a blessing or a malediction to others, so go back to the beginning and ADAPT again, this time with you as the facilitator and the person you are assisting as the ben-eficiary.

https://www.priestmanweb.com/

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SkillBuild 2022 – register to take part now

2022-02-23

Registrations for SkillBuild, the national multi-trade skills competition, are now open. Any stonemasonry trainee who would like to pit their skills against their fellow students can register here. 

SkillBuild is overseen by CITB. It is the largest multi-trade skills competition in the UK for construction trainees and apprentices.

A series of competitions sees those learning their skills compete against each other to be crowned the winner in their chosen trade.

Competitors will be tested on their technical abilities, their time management, problem solving and their ability to work under the inevitable pressure of a competition. THose taking part normally find they get an enormous boost to their confidence, self-esteem and life skills - all attributes valued by employers and so helpful for a career in construction.

The Regional Qualifiers run UK-wide from April to June each year. They are one-day events, the winners of which go through to the SkillBuild UK National Final in November.

SkillBuild works in partnership with WorldSkillsUK, and the winner of the Skillbuild national final could go on to compete in the European and International WorldSkills competitions.

The next two-yearly international WorldSkills takes place in Shanghai, China, on 12-17 October this year, although because of the diffciulties with Covid will not this time include stonemasonry. Stonemasonry will, however, be back in the 2024 WorldSkills in Lyon, France, and the UK aims to have a stonemason as part of Team UK.

At the previous WorldSkills in Kazan, Russia, in 2019 (Shanghai was supposed to be in 2021 but because of Covid was postponed) the UK stonemasonry contestant was Ethan Conlon, who worked at APS Masonry at the time and is now with the APS parent company, Cotswold Natural Stone, which is the Conlon family business. 

 

 

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Landscape Forum

2022-02-23

The Landscape Forum is one of Stone Federation Great Britain’s sector focus groups. Here an architect  gives their view on the benefits of using natural stone when designing pavements and hard landscaping for towns and cities.

The treatment of the surface of streets and squares makes a huge impact on the identity of any town or city.

Since Georgian times natural stone has been a favoured material in successful cities of the UK, including the magnificent streets of London, The Crescent in Bath and the elegant cities of Edinburgh and Liverpool. Stone was chosen to express prosperity and create places of worth.

Today natural stone is still chosen by designers and clients for its aesthetic properties – its inherent good looks and natural beauty and its ability to retain these looks in the long term. Some stone appearance actually improves with age.

By comparison, man-made alternatives can start to lose their visual appeal and be in need of renewal much sooner, often long before they have lost their structural integrity.

The wide variety of natural colours and the natural variations within stones allow the creation of unique solutions, which enhance local distinctiveness.

Stone can be successfully used as a simple mono-colour or by mixing a rich pattern with different hues, either bright or muted. And the permanence of colour with its ability to resist fading in sunlight is a great asset.

Designing with natural stone allows flexibility, as an infinite number of sizes and shapes can be produced from the product with no compromise on the attractiveness or performance of it. It makes it easy to design a pavement compatible with standard street furniture, kerbs and drainage.

The stone can be cut to exacting tolerances, allowing the creation of intricate designs. A good example of this is seen with the complex granite seating walls at Pier Head Liverpool.

The design of the individual units was computer modelled and cutting schedules prepared in the UK. They were cut and dry assembled like a giant jigsaw puzzle before they were transported to check on accurate buildability. On-site, construction went smoothly.

The versatility of stone is favoured by craftsmen and stonemasons. For generations natural stone has been used for masonry, traditional carving and etching. Now, with modern developments in both CAD design and cutting techniques, designers can embrace other aspects of art in the landscape, including text and illustration, as well as inlay with other materials like stainless steel.

It also allows a high-quality finish to contrasting step nosings to be achieved and the creation of co-ordinating tactile pavings needed to help with DDA (Disability Discrimination Act) compliance.

On steps and walls, ribbing can be cut into the natural stone to provide a subtle but effective deterrent to skate-boarders without the need for metal studs, which can detract from the overall appearance.

The natural durability and inherent strength of good quality natural stone make it ideal for townscape work where long scheme life is important.

But it is important to select the right, good quality stone. CE marking, which should be applied to natural stone paving products, provides assurances of quality and performance. With appropriate construction techniques, stone can withstand vehicular traffic as well as heavy pedestrian usage. And stone can provide inherently good skid and slip resistance.

https://www.stonefed.org.uk/

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Cyber Security for Construction Businesses

Cyber security guidance from GCHQ - download it here

2022-02-23

With fears growing that Russia might launch a cyber-attack on Western European targets and, in any case, the number of criminal cases of cyber attacks growing, the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) has partnered the Chartered Institute of Building (CIOB) to produce a guide for smaller construction companies on how to protect themselves from cyber attacks.

The guide is called Cyber Security for Construction Businesses. It can be downloaded from the NCSC website here, or you can download the PDF directly by clicking on the icon at the end of this report.

A lot of companies in construction, including stone companies, have had their computers frozen by cyber attacks. The attackers normally demand untraceable Bitcoins to unblock computers, although paying does not always get your computers back. Instead it simply leads to further demands for more Bitcoins. So back up your data, so you don’t have to pay.

Some high profile cyber attacks against the construction industry illustrate how businesses of all sizes are being targeted. Small businesses are often chosen because their computers can be less secure than those of larger companies.

As the industry continues to embrace and adopt more digital ways of working, it is more important than ever to understand how you might be vulnerable to cyber attacks and what you can do to protect yourself.

This guidance is aimed at small-to-medium sized businesses working in the construction industry and the wider supply chain (including the manufacture of building products, surveying, and the sale of buildings).

By implementing the steps described in Cyber Security for Construction Businesses you will be protected from the most common forms of cyber attack. And if you are attacked, you should be able to recover quickly.

If everyone follows the advice in Cyber Security for Construction Businesses the attacks from criminals could be ended because nobody will pay and criminals will no longer find the attacks lucrative.

The National Cyber Security Centre was created by the British spymasters of GCHQ. NCSC also has a Small Business Guide offering further affordable, practical advice on how to stay secure online. Larger organisations can find more guidance in the NCSC publication 10 Steps to Cyber Security.

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Fitzgerald Contractors hand ownership to employees

Civils company sets up trust for employee ownership

2022-02-22

Civil engineer Fitzgerald Contractors has become the latest company to transfer ownership to an employee ownership trust. 

Managing Director Nick Coley, who acquired the business in 2013 when its parent company, Thomas Vale, was bought by Bouygues UK, completed the transition of ownership to the employees on 21 February. The business is now 100% owned by the 120 employees.

Nick Coley remains MD and the existing Board of Directors retain their roles. They say employee ownership will provide greater opportunities for staff to influence business decisions through the formation of an employee council.

Nick says: “We consider that an employee ownership trust model is ideally suited to Fitzgerald’s philosophy. The thinking behind employee ownership has businesses exactly like ours in mind. This is a very exciting stage in the company’s history and safeguards Fitzgerald’s future for the benefit of all employees.”

The company, which had a turnover of £17.1miillion in the year to the end of March 2021 (down from £23.4million in 2020) says employee ownership will allow it to provide greater opportunities for succession from within the internal management team over the coming years, an ethos it says has already served it well.

An employee ownership trust is where the employees of a business own all or most of the shares in a company. It is growing in popularity as it offers benefits for businesses, their owners and employees as a way of succession planning.

Employee ownership can help companies to retain their independence, reward employees, and enable outgoing shareholders to receive a fair value for their contribution to the development of the company. It also spreads financial risk, as part of employees' income comes from dividends, so automatically adjusts with trading conditions. And because employees share in the profits of the company directly, they are motivated to want to increase those profits.

As well as being used for succession planning, it is also used by some new business as it helps to attract and retain talented people and create a positive culture.

While employee ownership has gained more attention of late, the concept is not new. John Spedan Lewis established the John Lewis Partnership as an employee-owned company in 1929.

Dozens of companies have turned to the model in recent years, including Paye Stonework & Restoration, Buckingham Group, Briggs & Forrester and Readie Construction.

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Simon Souter

WFF becomes an official backer of KBB

2022-02-21

The Worktop Fabricators Federation (WFF) has become an official sponsor of KBB, the kitchens, bathrooms and interiors exhibition that takes place at the NEC Birmingham 6-9 March. 

“Endorsing KBB is a natural step for the WFF,” says director Simon Souter. “We launched the Worktop Fabricators Federation at KBB only two years ago – just weeks before the first lockdown. Both the show and the WFF have come through two incredibly testing years and emerged sharper and stronger as a result. 

“Giving our endorsement to the KBB exhibition is an acknowledgement of the importance of a national event – and a reflection of the growing importance of made-to-measure stone interiors right across the sector.”

The decision sees WFF joining other established industry quality campaigners suck as the kitchen & bathroom association KBSA, the Bathroom Manufacturers Association, and the British Institute of Kitchen, Bedroom & Bathroom Installation (BIKBBI) as official Partners of the KBB exhibition.

It also gives the WFF an important platform to communicate the benefits of working with professional worktop fabricators to the kitchen studios and interior designers who make up the majority of KBB’s visitor base.

“Designing, templating, creating and fitting stone worktops is an exacting and professional business,” says Simon Souter. 

“As the market has grown and matured, so installers have increasingly become concerned at the sometimes costly consequences of dealing with untried suppliers. Customers want to know that all trades involved in their projects are capable, professional and reliable. And the worktop industry needs to provide the kitchen companies with the very best service.

“WFF aims to do everything it can to capture and develop the professionalism of our industry – giving both customers and investors confidence that in dealing with a WFF member they are getting the very best product and the best service.

“Working alongside KBB is a demonstration that professional, reliable and safety-minded stone fabricators are vital and intimate contributors to the wider goal of maintaining the high-value, high-quality reputation of the whole K&B and interiors sector.”

For the record: Mike Boydon is not a Director of WFF. In the January/February 2022 issue of Natural Stone Specialist magazine in the report about Bellagio Marble Ideas, it was stated that Director Mike Boydon is also a Director of the Worktop Fabricators Federation (WFF), which he is not.

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Trolex Air XS

Silica dust monitor keeps you safe

2022-02-20

By the end of May or early June, SiG (Stone Industry Group) should have a device for sale that measures levels of respirable crystalline silica in the air accurately in real time. 

The device is called Trolex Air XS, and is said to be more than twice as accurate as the X-Ray defraction units that are currently used to measure RCS levels as well as providing instant readings.

The unit was introduced to members of the Worktop Fabricators Federation at their meeting at machinery company Intermac’s premises in Northamptonshire last year, when volunteers were asked to carry out field trials.

The development of the unit by British company Trolex is now almost complete. It will be sold in the stone industry by SiG, in the UK and also in America and Europe.

It was introduced to the Americans this month (February) at StonExpo/Marmomac, part of the International Surfaces Event held in Las Vegas. It won the ‘Best of Technology 2022’ award at the exhibition.

Among those manning the exhibition stand in Las Vegas was Ash Butler, who has now joined SiG and will be selling the Trolex Air XS in the UK.

In America, concerns about silicosis and lung cancer resulting from exposure to RCS are even greater than they are in the UK, due in part to the level of claims that can be made by employees who end up with a disease.

In the USA the permitted workplace exposure level to RCS is half the current level in the UK, although the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Respiratory Health (APPG) said in its 2020 report Silica – the next asbestos? that the UK level should be reduced to the American level. The Group is currently reviewing that recommendation (read more about that here).

Cutting sandstone masonry in a British factory.

In the British sandstone industry the risk from RCS is taken seriously and people are routinely protected by substantial PPE, including positive pressure helmets. SiG is planning to introduce a positive pressure helmet to its range, having discovered one developed during the coronavirus pandemic to protect key workers from the Covid virus. It is particularly effective but lightweight for comfortable use over sustained periods.

At worktop fabricators in the UK, protection often involves no more than a mask over the mouth and nose that might or might not fit properly and be worn regularly by the operator, even though granite and engineered quartz typically produce high levels of RCS when worked. Even when worked wet, RCS will float in air-born water droplets that can be inhaled.

The sunlight exposes the level of water-born dust in this worktop fabricator's workshop in the USA.

HSE tests have shown air-born levels of RCS can exceed legal exposure limits outside as well as inside CNC machine enclosures. Using angle grinders, wet as well as dry, also produces RCS levels in the air well above legal limits.

“In the USA fabricators are putting warning stickers on slabs saying there’s an inherent risk of silicosis from handling and cutting this material,” says SiG Director Simon Bradbury.

He says in the UK the Health & Safety Executive is getting ever more vigilent about dust in general and RCS in particular because RCS is the biggest dust danger to construction workers after asbestos.

The Trolex Air XS is mobile, so can be used to test the RCS levels in different areas of a factory.

It has a price tag of just under £10,000, but Ash Butler says if companies look on it as an investment to protect themselves from injury claims by employees, as well as helping to protect employees from exposure to potentially lethal dust, it does not seem too high a price to pay.

SiG Director Simon Bradbury, SiG Inc President Jerry Van Der Bass and Ash Butler, who has recently joined SiG and will be selling the Trolex Air XS in the UK, receiving the 'Best of Technology Award' at the International Surfaces Event in Las Vegas earlier this month. Ash said the Air XS received the award because the judges could see where the industry is going in terms of the need for proactive dust monitoring. He says the UK is only a few years behind the US.

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