Design And Build - Media Pack

Page 1

www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

MEDIA INFORMATION PACK


www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

Saving You Money! Design and Build Magazine, the national choice for the construction professional At Design & Build Magazine, we believe that each form of media has a specific value. Design and Build Magazine is distributed electronically every other month to a readership of over 20,000 people who are actively involved in the decision making and just as importantly all 20,000 of our readers are from organisation involved in the construction process. Advertising within Design and Build offers the same platform as being at a trade show 24 hours a day for 60 consecutive days. We are tried and tested and offer a professional team of staff who are on hand to offer advice and assistance so that we get it right first time, every time. Why not contact us on 01204 216811 to dis-cuss your requirements or visit us online at www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk


www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

Our Audience: In Numbers 20,041 Retail Industry 5%

Leisure Industry 2% Councils 16%

NHS 12%

Government Agencies 9%

Schools and Universities 15%

Sub Contractors 1%

Private Developers 6%

Architects 16%

Main Contractors 18%


www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

Prices & Sizes Available Front Cover 210 mm x 297 mm £3,200 + VAT

Full Double Page 420 mm x 297 mm £2,000 + VAT

Full Page 210 mm x 297 mm £1,200 + VAT

Back Cover 210 mm x 297 mm £2,800 + VAT

Half Double Page 420 mm x 148 mm £1,200 + VAT

Half Page 210 mm x 148 mm £900 + VAT

Quarter Page 86 mm x 130 mm £550 + VAT

Eighth Page 86 mm x 60 mm £325 + VAT

We offer a FREE design service in house. Please contact us to discuss your requirements


1/8 page adverts

full page advert

1/4 page advert www.basestructures.com

WINDOWS WITH VISION

rationel.co.uk

Retail

architecture / masterplanning / design

Specialists in tensile fabric and mesh structures

Continental Landscapes Ltd IT Support Specialist Mixed Use

-Full service -Design, manufacture & installation -Standard structures & bespoke -Exceptional track record

Base Structures Tel: +44 117 9712229 Email: mail@basestructures.com

Asset Management

Telephone: 0800 132 4567 Fax: 0800 123 4567 Email: info@studiouk.biz Website: www.studiouk.biz

Studio UK

IT Support Specialist

Masterplanning

Unit 18 Salisbury Road Business Park, Pewsey, Wiltshire, SN9 5PZ Leisure

www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

Examples of Adverts

www.urbanedgearchitecture.co.uk

1/2 page advert

Telephone: 0800 132 4567 Fax: 0800 123 4567 Email: info@studiouk.biz Website: www.studiouk.biz

www.helo.uk

Unit 18 Salisbury Road Business Park, Pewsey, Wiltshire, SN9 5PZ MODERN SCANDINAVIAN ARCHITECTURE Passive House with Rationel AURAPLUSŽ windows Rationel Rationel is is the the leading leading Scandinavian Scandinavian supplier supplier of of windows windows and and doors doors for for low-energy low-energy and and Passive Passive House House buildings. buildings. Visit Visit our our stand stand to to experience experience our our wide wide range range of of products products and and hear hear about about our our energy-effi energy-efficient cient window window and and door door solutions. solutions. Helo Ltd is the world's largest sauna and steam business - developing, manufacturing and marketing sauna and steam products worldwide. Helo Ltd operates sauna room, sauna heater and steam generator manufacturing facilities in Finland, Sweden, Germany and the United States and has an extensive research and development program for sauna and steam related products. The group's range includes wood-burning and electric heaters and their controllers, steam generators, sauna and steam rooms, steam suites, infrared cabins and an array of sauna and steam bathing accessories. The company was established in 1919 and is now named Helo Group Ltd and as the world’s largest sauna and steam company our products are exported to more than 80 countries worldwide

For more information about Helo, please contact Jeff Le Clos, Commercial Sales Manager, Helo Ltd

3 The Felbridge Centre, Imberhorne Lane, East Grinstead, West Sussex, RH19 1XP Tel. 01342 300 555 E. sales@helo.uk

Latest Jobs - www.designandbuildmagazinejobs.co.uk

Business Directory - www.designandbuildmagazinedirectory.co.uk

Latest Jobs - www.designandbuildmagazinejobs.co.uk

Business Directory - www.designandbuildmagazinedirectory.co.uk


www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

Accepted File Formats PDF - press ready (Our preferred format is Adobe PDF) Requirements: Must be PDF document up to version 1.6; to size and print-optimised; all fonts must be embedded; high-resolution images only (300dpi). Quark Xpress up to Version 8 Requirements: Quark document; all fonts must be supplied; all images and logos must be high-resolution. Adobe Illustrator up to CS6 Requirements: Illustrator document; all fonts must be supplied or embedded; all images and logos must be high-resolution. Adobe InDesign up to CS6 Requirements: InDesign document; all fonts must be supplied; all images and logos must be high-resolution. TIFF/JPEG Requirements: High-resolution (300dpi) Other formats Corel Draw, Microsoft Publisher, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Powerpoint Delivery Please email all files to artwork@designandbuildmagazine.co.uk Hardcopies can be sent to us at Studio UK, Capitol House (Ground Floor), 51 Churchgate, Bolton, BL1 1LY (Hardcopies only returned when recieved with a SAE.)


www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

Example Feature

ZSL’s Tiger Territory ZSL London Zoo’s brand new Sumatran tiger enclosure has been given the royal seal of approval on Wednesday 20 March, when it was officially opened by HRH The Duke of Edinburgh. Tiger Territory, a £3.6m project, is home to Jae Jae and Melati, Europe’s most genetically important pair of Sumatran tigers who were matched by the global breeding programme for the critically endangered species. With high hopes for breeding resting on the pair, their cubs would be the first to be born at ZSL London Zoo for more than 15 years. And in what keepers are hoping is a prophetic twist of fate, tigress Melati is the granddaughter of the Zoo’s last tiger cub, Hari. The new enclosure covered by a canopy of steel cable netting stretches over 2,500sq m and features a number of tall feeding poles to encourage the animals to climb for their dinner. The Tigers are treated to a pool as well as heated rocks. It is hoped their new environment, designed to meet their needs first, will encourage them to mate. “We have tried our best to fade into the background,” says Michael Kozdon,

architect of the new £3.6m Tiger Territory at London Zoo. It’s not often you hear an architect say that, but then it’s not often you have a pair of endangered Sumatran tigers as clients, either. Jae Jae, for example, likes to have generous amounts of Old Spice sprayed around his enclosure (that’s males for you). “In the past,” continues Kozdon, “animal enclosures were all about creating an iconic architectural statement. Now the emphasis is on animal welfare, on bringing visitors as close to the creatures as possible. Our aim is to disappear.”

ous silhouette echoes the pinkish peaks of its neighbour, the Mappin Terraces, a manmade range of rocky mountains that have long poked their summits above the trees, bringing a surreal air to this strange corner of the park. Built in 1914, this elevated landscape was the result of a clause governing the zoo’s expansion: an additional landgrab of four acres would only be allowed if the animals they housed could be visible from the rest of the park. Sadly, this sheer geological formation, erupting above the neat neoclassical terraces of NW1, has been barren since 1985, when Pipaluk (the last of the polar bears, whose name means Little One in Inuit) was finally moved out after 18 years.

This explains why, rather than being held in by a roof, Jae Jae and his partner, Melati, have a fine net canopy stretching above their heads – even though its silken www.basestructures.com threads are made of 3mm steel cable (tigers are capable of jumping 5m from a standing start). Stretched into tensile Specialists in tensile fabric and mesh structures peaks and troughs -Full service by four black metal -Design, manufacture & installation poles (the tallest of -Standard structures & bespoke which rises to 20m), -Exceptional track record the canopy soars above the treetops of Regent’s Park like a Base Structures giant spider’s web. Tel: +44 117 9712229

Email: mail@basestructures.com

The enclosure’s sinu-

Initial design provided by Wharmby Cozdon Architects Prince Phillip opens the new tiger exhibit

Latest Jobs - www.designandbuildmagazinejobs.co.uk

Business Directory - www.designandbuildmagazinedirectory.co.uk

Latest Jobs - www.designandbuildmagazinejobs.co.uk

Business Directory - www.designandbuildmagazinedirectory.co.uk


www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

The two tigers Jae Jae and Melati love their new enclosure.

Geri Halliwell was also there to open the new enclosure.

Prince Phillip opens the new tiger exhibit The once ostrich house is now the indoor enclosure for the two tigers.

Latest Jobs - www.designandbuildmagazinejobs.co.uk

Business Directory - www.designandbuildmagazinedirectory.co.uk

Latest Jobs - www.designandbuildmagazinejobs.co.uk

Business Directory - www.designandbuildmagazinedirectory.co.uk


www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

e new enclosure.

Tiger Territory’ will be a new home for Sumatran tigers, of which it is estimated that there are now fewer than 300 left in the wild. As this number decreases, the creation of man-made habitats in which they can be protected and conserved becomes increasingly vital to ensure the survival of this magnificent creature. However, the potential danger of a Sumatran tiger should not be underestimated. Weighing up to 130kg, running at up to 30 miles per hour, jumping as high as the average house and being able to dig well below ground means that it is a difficult predator to contain. This becomes even more challenging given the second fundamental purpose of the new enclosure: to create the illusion of openness. Providing intimate spaces between human and animal will enable an insight into the tiger’s world, exciting the public’s emotions and desires to protect them. Our response to these requirements is an elegant stainless steel cable net structure, with a surface area of 2250m2. This lightweight solution safely contains the force of the tigers without the appearance of a tangible barrier. Internally it is supported by four main masts that have been jacked into position, with fine sand in pots at each base. Smaller perimeter masts are tied back using Platipus ground anchors, utilising the weight of the soil to resist the cable net forces. The new enclosure is situated between two existing buildings: a 1930s brickwork stork and ostrich house and a 1960s concrete sea lion viewing stand. These have both been preserved and strengthened in order to minimise the impact of the development; by avoiding the disruption within the zoo that demolition would cause and by reducing the quantity of material required to create the new enclosure. Sensitive refurbishment has been undertaken in order to create living quarters for the tigers and viewing platforms for the visitors. Although the former sea lion stand was deemed unable to provide necessary lateral stability to the cable net structure, this was overcome through the addition of clamping reinforcing steel plates to either side of the frame, without compromising the original structure. David Dexter Associates are extremely proud to have met the challenge of creating a structure that satisfies the two conflicting roles of enabling tigers to live in safe captivity whilst also providing the ultimate experience for the public by allowing them to experience close proximity to the animals. Through the design of a highly efficient structure, we have been able to minimise material usage and consequently the energy required to deliver the new enclosure. This solution meets all practical requirements whilst also minimising material use: the

Organic, Proactive, Reactive

total weight of the new structure is approximately 10kg/m2. This is approximately one tenth of what a traditional solution might have weighed. Additionally, where possible essential additional structure has been constructed using low impact materials, such as reused timber railway sleepers.

David Dexter Associates have over ten years’ experience in providing civil, structural and architectural engineering design consultancy. We are proud to be involved in the development of the sumatran tiger exhibit at London Zoo.

Tigers are avid T - 020 7247 7172 E- info@daviddexter.co.uk climbers,” explains 1-5 Vyner Street, London, E2 9DG Robin Fitzgerald, - www.daviddexter.co.uk the zoo’s projects manager. “They like to observe their terrain from a towering vantage point, so we’ve given them a habitat that lets them do exactly that – with a view out over Regent’s Park.” Describing how the poles and canopy support each other, he adds: “It’s basically circus tent technology.” Neatly complying with the brief to all but vanish into thin air, this means there is no need for the extra steel structures that are so common in the zoo’s other mesh enclosures – such as Cedric Price’s famous Snowdon Aviary. Built in 1964, the aviary’s dramatic steel skeleton mimics the angular geometry of a bird’s wing.

The Tiger Territory had other constraints to grapple with, most notably the fact that several existing buildings had to be incorporated into the redevelopment. With a limited area of 36 acres in one of London’s most protected settings, the zoo is forced to modify what it has – in this case, a Victorian stork and ostrich house and a 1960s sea lion viewing platform, both of which had been off-limits to visitors for 30 years.

Tigers are excellent climbers and like to observe their terrain from a towering vantage point and Tiger Territory will allow them to do just that. The exhibit features high feeding poles to

www.peakcontractors.co.uk

ZSL London Zoo is just two weeks away from opening the doors to Tiger Territory, a brand-new £3.6m flagship exhibit, which will be home to the Zoo’s latest arrivals, Jae Jae and Melati, a pair of Sumatran tigers.

Business Directory - www.designandbuildmagazinedirectory.co.uk

encourage their natural predatory behaviours and tall trees for the cats to scale. Unusually for cats, tigers love water, and visitors will be able to see them hanging out in their custom-built pool. When they’re not dipping their paws in the water, the tigers will have all-day access to indoor dens where visitors will be able to see them relaxing on heated rocks. Tiger Territory will enable ZSL to breed the critically-endangered tigers at ZSL London Zoo and learn more about these elusive animals to apply to its international field conservation projects to try to reverse the bleak fate of the Sumatran tiger. Both the Global Management Species Programme and the European breeding programme for Sumatran tigers are coordinated by tiger experts at ZSL London Zoo – where ZSL’s specialists are responsible for managing a healthy and diverse population of tigers in zoos around the world. The result of a large public fundraising campaign led by ZSL London Zoo, Tiger Territory will give millions of zoo visitors the chance to get close to these incredible animals and provide a central hub for ZSL’s tiger conservation work when it opens on March 22 2013. Project type- Refurbishment Only Client- Zoological Society of London Site Address-London Zoo, Regents Park, NW1 4RY Start date- March 2012 Contract Period- 12 Months Sector- Hotels and Leisure Estimated Project Value- 2.5 M Funding Type- Private Funding Units- 1 Architect- Whamby Kozdon Architects Main Contractor- Peak Contractors Ltd Scheme Description- Scheme comprises refurbishment of Ostrich House, External Paddock and Viewing Stand to provide a Tiger Exhibit.

The new enclosure is five times larger than the previous one, which dated from the 1970s, and its design demonstrates a new emphasis on animal husbandry. The pairing of Jae Jae and Melati was meticulously planned using Studbook, which charts every captive creature’s genetic provenance to facilitate perfect matches. “It’s the online dating service for animals,” says Fitzgerald. And if the hot rocks get them too frisky, the pair can be separated, along with any future cubs, into two different parts of the enclosure, connected by a glass door. While 2013 may be the Year of the Snake on the Chinese calendar, at ZSL London Zoo it’s definitely the Year of the Tiger.

Latest Jobs - www.designandbuildmagazinejobs.co.uk

ZSL London Zoo is home to world-leading tiger experts, and has been home to tigers for more than 100 years. The new 2,500sqm (27,000sqft) Tiger Territory has been created with ZSL’s team of tiger keepers and conservationists to ensure that it perfectly suits the big cats.

The ostrich house now provides a cosy den for the tigers, complete with heated rocks to soothe their weary muscles, while the sea lion stand has become an elevated viewing platform for visitors, with panoramic windows looking out across the Indonesian-inspired landscaping of the enclosure. From here, you can watch the tigers splashing about in their pool, or scaling the feeding poles to devour chicken wings and steak.

We are proud to be the main contractors working on this prestigious project at the ZSL

The Pinnacles, Capital Place, Lovet Road, Harlow, Essex, CM19 5AS T. 01279 641 146 - F.01279 450 724

Visitors to Tiger Territory will see Jae Jae and Melati in their stunning Indonesian-inspired habitat, which has been designed to meet every sensory need of these endangered animals.

The Team: Architect: Wharmby Kozdon Architects Plans by: Zoological Society of London Structural Consultant: David Dexter Associates M & E Consultant: Hitek Consultants Ltd Quantity Surveyor: WT Partnership Main Contractor: Peak Contractors

Latest Jobs - www.designandbuildmagazinejobs.co.uk

Business Directory - www.designandbuildmagazinedirectory.co.uk


www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

Contact Details

Telephone 01204 216811 Fax 0872 352 0246 Website: www.designandbuildmagazine.co.uk Editorial edit@designandbuildmagazine.co.uk Artwork / Design artwork@designandbuildmagazine.co.uk Sales sales@designandbuildmagazine.co.uk Accounts accounts@designandbuildmagazine.co.uk General Enquries info@designandbuildmagazine.co.uk

For further information please contact Studio UK, Capitol House (Ground Floor), 51 Churchgate, Bolton, BL1 1LY


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.