Author: Gardner, P
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Gardner, P
The Structural Engineer, Volume 77, Issue 17, 1999
Bernard Johnston grew up in the industrial landscape of the north east of England, outside Newcastle-upon-Tyne, amongst the shipyards and bridges of Tyneside. As a small boy he was deeply impressed by these surroundings and remembers ‘building reinforced earth structures and long spans of twigs and grass and earth’ in the garden of his home. He also spent hours wandering round the Museum of Science & Engineering where he was most attracted to the models of ships and planes. His father was a commercial artist running a silk-screen business, and his brother became a mechanical engineer.
The Government has set a challenging agenda for the construction industry, with a plethora of initiatives, which even Construction Minister Nick Raynsford has described as ‘almost too many - some might say an overload of initiatives’. However, they have, in his view been necessary to begin the long process of modernising the construction industry following the Latham and Egan reports. Kathy Stansfield
Movement in clay Rodney Higgins has usedpart of his holiday, he tells us, to catch up on back numbers of The Structural Engineer: most commendable! Evidently, his reading extended more widely, and he writes: Having recently read the new BRE Digest concerning the influence of trees in clay soils on low-rise buildings, I was reminded of an experiment I undertook on a subsidence claim following the 1989-90 drought.