With its distinctive black glass, basket weave cladding, the hospital’s exterior panels seem to reflect the expansive movement of sky and clustered cloud formations from every angle.
And, by the way, interestingly enough, I don't really get punched in the face that often at all anymore, which is, I think, a litmus test that things are changing.”.Marks says that these days people mainly just want to know how to get where they need to go with all of this.
She says the CEOs still fighting the change to industrialised construction need to recognise that others aren’t anymore - that in a long-game sense, they “probably aren’t doing the right thing.”.“Companies should be seeing this as a massive opportunity in shaping themselves,” Johnston says, “positioning themselves to see it as a benefit and not saying: ‘I hope this passes me by and I can avoid making some of the big shifts.’”.Marks reiterates that the shift to industrialised construction is going to take everyone’s involvement.
All of the key players need to recognise their own dissatisfaction and start making changes.. “I don’t just feel the shift,” she says.“I’m holding on some days because I’m getting knocked over from the shift!”.
The thing that will make the biggest difference at the moment, she says, is the productisation - connecting those products upfront in the platform to provide connectivity for designers and makers.. “And I think that's why what you're doing at Bryden Wood is so cool.
We need to enable a connected ecosystem and a connected tissue between all these foundational products to really make this work.UK carbon emissions are less than 1% of global emissions.
I am one of 66 million people in the UK.On the other hand, how can I encourage, debate or support others to reduce their emissions without being willing to act and experience the process myself.
Taking the wood out of my own eye before I try to take it out of the eyes of others..The answer, I feel, to the limitation of an individual impact is multiplication.