Etihad Campus, Stadium and Collar Site Development Thread

Digging holes everywhere explains why they didn't bother sorting out any of those areas around City Square / JMW in the last year.

Suspect they may be tracing scrap copper from the many years of electrical copper wire manufacture at the premises formely adjacent to the Etihad Stadium.
 
Suspect they may be tracing scrap copper from the many years of electrical copper wire manufacture at the premises formely adjacent to the Etihad Stadium.
it's the wire trolleys and baskets from Asda they're after.....£10 tenner a pop for all returns.
Sorran has em in the revenue budget,everything gets monetized !!
 
I'll post the other pictures tomorrow morning.

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These look like window sampling rigs. Steel tubes are inserted into the ground and and the soil is extracted from tubes. It is usually to test for contamination rather than ground bearing capacity. Prior to any development the Local Authority require a remediation strategy to be put in place where any contaminated ground is identified and to excavated material classified as inert, non contaminated, contaminated etc.... Disposal sites need to understand the classification of any excavated material so that contaminated waste can be managed correctly. This level of information also helps any contractor pricing the groundworks as contaminated material costs a lot more to dispose than inert material. The contractor will also need to provide a remediation strategy for the LPA demonstrating that any imported material is clean and not contaminated. Very responsible way of managing the construction process. For those who are interested in future development of the ground there are very encouraging signs.
 
A bit of imagination from our owners and their Architects could create something similar on the Etihad Campus.

Superb!

SSC, London projects thread.

Credit to SE9.

Gasholders London | King's Cross N1C[/SIZE]

London forum thread: http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=505188

Official website: http://gasholderslondon.co.uk/



Location

  • Address: Coal Drops Yard, London N1C
  • London borough: Camden
  • Station: King's Cross St Pancras
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    12px-Underground.svg.png
Project facts

  • Developer: Argent
  • Architect: Wilkinson Eyre
  • Floors: 12 | 9 | 8
  • Homes: 144
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This weekend at the Gasholders London site, photos by potto:

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Great ideas,as would hotel, restaurants, cinema etc in them and would like to see it but not sure our owners would get involved as our owners, though Abu Dhabi companies may,I think outside developers would need to approach them and the council with plans for anything like those.
 
Rumoured to be a full led wrap going around the exterior mate

laclasicafansoficial - Instagram

Merged 2 separate pictures together

Bernabéu Stadium redevelopment including stadium exterior wrap.

Interesting how they’ve gone about covering the spirals.

Click to enlarge.

F52-D3650-71-B7-484-E-B0-BC-7-F0051-DF544-F.jpg


Enlarged the picture. Slightly blurred.

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These look like window sampling rigs. Steel tubes are inserted into the ground and and the soil is extracted from tubes. It is usually to test for contamination rather than ground bearing capacity. Prior to any development the Local Authority require a remediation strategy to be put in place where any contaminated ground is identified and to excavated material classified as inert, non contaminated, contaminated etc.... Disposal sites need to understand the classification of any excavated material so that contaminated waste can be managed correctly. This level of information also helps any contractor pricing the groundworks as contaminated material costs a lot more to dispose than inert material. The contractor will also need to provide a remediation strategy for the LPA demonstrating that any imported material is clean and not contaminated. Very responsible way of managing the construction process. For those who are interested in future development of the ground there are very encouraging signs.

Thanks for that interesting info.

I took some close up pictures of the rigs and tubes in the ground. I’ll post the other pictures in a bit.
 
laclasicafansoficial - Instagram

Merged 2 separate pictures together

Bernabéu Stadium redevelopment including stadium exterior wrap.

Interesting how they’ve gone about covering the spirals.

Click to enlarge.

F52-D3650-71-B7-484-E-B0-BC-7-F0051-DF544-F.jpg


Enlarged the picture. Slightly bl
Is it not UAE money that is paying for the Madrid upgrade, @jrb you saying about covering the walkways around the stadium , would that not be done when they expand the CBS etc
 
Last edited:
These look like window sampling rigs. Steel tubes are inserted into the ground and and the soil is extracted from tubes. It is usually to test for contamination rather than ground bearing capacity. Prior to any development the Local Authority require a remediation strategy to be put in place where any contaminated ground is identified and to excavated material classified as inert, non contaminated, contaminated etc.... Disposal sites need to understand the classification of any excavated material so that contaminated waste can be managed correctly. This level of information also helps any contractor pricing the groundworks as contaminated material costs a lot more to dispose than inert material. The contractor will also need to provide a remediation strategy for the LPA demonstrating that any imported material is clean and not contaminated. Very responsible way of managing the construction process. For those who are interested in future development of the ground there are very encouraging signs.

You should post more :)
 

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