John Chick, business unit leader of Laing O鈥橰ourke's Expanded Geotechnical, takes over as FPS chair from Steve Hadley, who has completed his two-year term of office.
聽鈥淚 am honoured to be appointed as chair of the FPS, an enduring specialist trade organisation which carries enormous status and respect within the geotechnical and wider construction industry,鈥 John Chick said.
Setting out his agenda, he said. 鈥淭here is a real need for the ground engineering industry to consider how we promote ourselves as a career choice. We can offer exciting and rewarding careers, delivering projects that make a real difference to society. We don鈥檛 present ourselves enough like that. We must lead the way in developing career paths for all of our teams, including our core site operatives, who are not simply in a pipeline somewhere waiting to be turned on and off,鈥 he said.
He added: 鈥淚 would like to see the FPS members establish career pathways for people through the industry and better support them as their careers progress. I am also keen to promote 鈥榮ustainability by design鈥 鈥 massive advances are being made in the carbon impact of the plant and materials we use to construct what we construct. The 鈥榳hat鈥 we construct is lagging in places. We design to codes which often (not always) dictate overdesign. I am not advocating abandonment of factors of safety, just rational use of them. If we can use low carbon concrete in a 25-metre-long pile, let鈥檚 look at the codes again and use low carbon concrete in a 22-metre-long pile. What is designed dictates the ultimate carbon cost, not necessarily just the 鈥榠ngredients鈥.
鈥淚 also think there is a need for commonality over what foundation performance data is gathered and how it鈥檚 handled from all the different sources on site, and in particular rig instrumentation and testing equipment. Why do we gather it? Where is it stored and how can it be used in the future to help re-use or repurposing?
鈥淭o keep advancing the safety agenda, I would like to do what I can to demonstrate or prove a viable alternative to some methodologies, which inherently put site workers hands, fingers and wrists at severe risk. Again, the safety lead has been taken in many cases by suppliers, whilst contractors have simply tried to procure the safest way of complying with a flawed specification. Let鈥檚 open up and understand those specifications to see what they mean.鈥
Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk