2005 June
Nurturing interest in building-services engineering
Securing the workforce of the future
CIBSE’s new president reflects on industry issues
Six functions into one valve for fan-coil units
Balancing valve designed for variable-volume systems
Commissioning instrument meets new challenges
Planning ahead — the choice between an A and a G
Commissioning elegance for elegant skyscraper
PTC control modes for fire and smoke dampers
Stainless-steel grease filters
Closer control for underfloor heating
Marstair adds heat-pump splits to its range
Concealed electric heating for doorways and ceilings
Mita launches non-metallic 4-way Cat6 shuttle box
Prefabricated pumping station for wastewater
Domestic hot water from condensing boiler
Ambi-Rad gives warm feeling to engineering
Oventrop helps business innovation
Prison laundry operation goes greener
Dane Housing tackles scalding risks
Land Rover reduces its carbon-dioxide emissions
Baxi Group expands into Spain and Portugal
Briggs & Forrester keeps up gold safety standard
RAC 05 Exhibition visitors swell by more than a third
ECA listing for water-cooled VRF air conditioning
CPD accreditation for HVAC controls course
Biggest high-temperature fan test
Faber Maunsell and Bullen practices merge
Energy 2005 includes top conference line-up
Faber Maunsell is a better place to work
ABB drives ahead in HVAC market
New managing director prepares to steer Airedale forward
GSH floats on Alternative Investment Market
‘Red tape scrapping is welcome – but more policy changes are needed’
The CEO of heat pump manufacturer Aira UK has said the government’s new proposals to scrap planning red tape for the installation of heat pumps in the UK will be a big breakthrough for the industry and consumers – but more policy changes are needed.
New procurement rules for NHS suppliers
New procurement rules mean NHS suppliers will need to demonstrate their green credentials so the NHS can achieve its target of becoming net zero for directly-controlled emissions by 2040, with an ambition to reach an 80% reduction in its carbon emissions between 2028 to 2032.