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HM Treasury News Release 10/01 6 February 2001 ANDREW SMITH ANNOUNCES NEW PRIME MINISTERS AWARD FOR THE MOST
OUTSTANDING PUBLIC BUILDING A new design award the "Prime Ministers Better Public
Building Award" was announced by the Chief Secretary Andrew Smith
today in a speech in London to the Better Public Buildings Conference.
The award reflects the Governments commitment to raising the
standard of public building projects by identifying and rewarding
high quality design and construction. Andrew Smith said: "The number of public buildings which are outstanding examples
of design, construction, and delivery, is growing every year.
These embody high quality at reasonable cost and represent best
value to the procurers, the users and the public. To recognise these achievements, and as another sign of our determination
to improve design, I am very pleased to announce today the Prime
Ministers Better Public Building Award. This award reflects the Prime Ministers personal interest
in excellence in public buildings, and his commitment to raising
the standard of public building projects. The award will be made
to the most outstanding building, and will be announced at the
British Construction Industry awards on 24 October. The award will be sponsored by the Commission for Architecture
and the Built Environment and the Office of Government Commerce
on behalf of all of the Government, and it will be administered
and judged under the aegis of the BCIA." A copy of the full text of the Chief Secretarys
speech is attached. SPEECH BY ANDREW SMITH MP, CHIEF SECRETARY TO THE TREASURY,
TO THE BETTER PUBLIC BUILDINGS CONFERENCE, 6TH FEBRUARY
2001 Why quality design delivers value for money Good Morning, It is important that we involve people across the whole of the public
sector in promoting good design, and I am glad to see such interest
at todays conference. It is important to recognise that well designed buildings can reduce
the overall costs of providing services, and they can increase the
effectiveness of those services. Good design is fundamental to value
for money. If we thought that best value meant cheap,
and ignored the long-term savings good design can bring, we would
be making a false economy. Best value is not the lowest price, but
the best combination of whole life costs and quality. That doesnt
mean, of course, that the highest cost is best value either. Modernising Public Services The benefits good design brings are more important now than at any
time in the last twenty years: Public services have faced years of
neglect by previous Governments, and we have been faced with the challenge
of investing in these services and in Britain's infrastructure. When we took office, we faced both a record of chronic under investment
in public services and a £27 billion deficit on the public finances,
so our first task was to create stability and sustainable public finances.
We have made the tough choices we needed to. We have set clear fiscal
rules over the economic cycle: and today we not only have low inflation
and stable growth but sound public finances and the national debt
falling towards 30 per cent of GDP. It is this sustained improvement in our public finances that makes
possible the prospect of sustained investment in our public services.
In the three-year spending review last summer, we announced an additional
£4 billion of capital spending this year, and net investment by the
public sector is set to double over the next three years. This is a massive investment in rebuilding public services, and we
expect a return for that investment. The public expects and deserves
high quality services to be delivered on time, and the taxpayer deserves
that they are delivered at the best value and to budget. Our overriding
aim is always to secure better value for money in all forms of procurement
not as a cost-cutting exercise, but as a way of delivering
more, better services and facilities from public investment. Benefits of Good Design Good public buildings are a demonstration of our respect for public
spaces and communities. Landmark buildings, like the Tate Modern,
can give new life and new identity to areas, and create new and valued
public spaces. But there is room for better design in all public buildings,
no matter how small. I am particularly interested in the role of good design in regenerating
our most disadvantaged communities. The air of neglect, abandon, and
hopelessness which blights poor areas is both a consequence and a
cause of poor design as well as low investment - a vicious and debilitating
circle of degeneration. Turning this into reverse in partnership with local people and businesses
is one of our most urgent priorities. Good design, coupled with investment
in everything from primary care facilities, to childrens play
areas, to business start-up units will send a powerful and confidence-boosting
signal that we care, we are listening to them, we are involving them
and that we are making a difference. The benefits of good design are not just skin-deep. Well designed
buildings can better serve the needs of the people who use them. They can reduce the costs of providing services over the whole life
of a building, they can have a positive impact on the welfare and
the productivity of the staff who work in them. There is a strong correlation between a high quality learning environment
and good teaching, attitudes and behaviour. Well designed schools
can have lower truancy rates and improved attendance, and better design
in schools can also free staff and resources for the activities that
matter. For example, one primary school found that by building a new
one-storey building, it needed fewer teachers monitoring breaks, and
three fewer lunchtime assistants. These are savings which can be put
into educating children instead. Another study, by the University of Sheffield, of a purpose-built
psychiatric unit in Hove, found significant improvements in outcomes
for patients. Treatment times were reduced by 14%, patients spent
less time in enforced isolation, and there were far fewer attacks
on staff. Good design has added a great deal of value for both staff
and patients, and this has delivered a significant improvement in
terms of cost. Good design can actually save money. Well designed buildings are
appropriate to the use they will be put to: their staff have a better
working environment, and at the early stages, designers can take account
of the costs of operating the building over its whole life. By taking account of the whole-life costs of a building at the earliest
design stages, we can reduce them. Design improvements which improve
the effectiveness of staff, or decrease the costs of running and maintaining
a building, can pay for themselves many times over during the lifetime
of the building. Taking an example from the private sector: BAAs (British Airports
Authority) office buildings had design and construction teams working
together from the outset, and the result is an overall saving of 30%
of costs. The public sector can and should learn from private sector
projects like this. To make the most of the benefits of good design we do need a new
approach to procurement, and a commitment at the highest. We need
committed and aware procurers, well-constructed specifications, and
integrated teams of designers and constructors, who can work together
to ensure the final building does its job well, on time, and on budget. What Government is doing to promote good design PPP and PFI have also forced the public sector to raise their game,
and become a better partner and a better procurer of public services.
To get the right outcome for the citizen and the taxpayer, the public
sector needs to be able to specify its requirements clearly, to negotiate
with the private sector on equal terms and ensure the best value for
taxpayers. And because PPP and PFI are not appropriate in all circumstances,
we need to draw on our experience to deliver better deals and better
buildings when using conventional procurement options. The Office of Government Commerce has been set up by this Government
to promote best practice in all sorts of procurement across the public
sector: the OGC has already produced the Better Public Buildings document
with DCMS. It will help departments with their own projects, and where
a Government-wide approach is needed it will manage or facilitate
commercial relationships on behalf of departments. If the public sector is to make the most of good design, it is important
that we are able to accurately asses the benefits of proposed designs.
The Treasurys Design in PFI guidance has improved
understanding of these benefits. The creation of CABE, the Commission for Architecture and the Built
Environment in 1999, was another important step, and we welcome the
work of the Construction Industry Council and CABE in developing key
performance indicators and in providing help and advice on design
and design procurement to public sector organisations. Prime Ministers Award Procuring better designed public buildings needs a strong commitment
to good design from the very top. That applies to central Government,
as well as to individual agencies and authorities. The Government
is committed to better design, and that commitment will be carried
forward by fourteen Ministerial Design Champions, who will drive forward
better design in their departments. The number of public buildings which are outstanding examples of
design, construction, and delivery, is growing every year. These embody
high quality at reasonable cost and represent best value to the procurers,
the users, and the public. To recognise these achievements, and as
another sign of our determination to improve design, I am very pleased
to announce today the Prime Ministers Better Public Building
Award." This award reflects the Prime Ministers personal interest in excellence
in public buildings, and his commitment to raising the standard of
public building projects by identifying and rewarding high-quality
design and construction. The award will made to the most outstanding
public building, and will be announced at the British Construction
Industry awards on 24th October, the UKs premier
accolades for all-round excellence in design, construction delivery
and performance. The award will be sponsored by CABE and OGC on behalf of all of Government,
and it will be administered and judged under the aegis of the BCIA.
The British Construction Industry awards have been made annually since
1988. They are promoted by the Daily Telegraph and the magazines The
Architects Journal and New Civil Engineer, and have an extremely rigorous
judging process, culminating with detailed visits to the short-listed
projects during which all those responsible - client, designers, and
contractor - are put through their paces. - The Judging panel is made
up of eminent architects, engineers and contractors and always chaired
by a heavyweight representative of the client sector - this year,
it will be Sir Stuart Lipton, chairman of CABE. Entry forms will be available from the 22nd February,
so I would like to invite you to enter for this important new award,
any new public buildings projects of any size which you are proud
of, whether as a client, a designer, a builder or a user. To qualify
they need to have been completed and brought into use in 2000. Conclusion Prudent, targeted long-term public investment is not only a social
good, but, in a changing and often insecure world, it is an economic
necessity. It is only by investment in our frontline public services
and infrastructure that we can equip ourselves for future economic
challenges. The Government has already substantially increased capital spending,
and we are determined that this spending should go as far as possible,
to give the public the high-quality public services they deserve,
and to create buildings and facilities we can all be proud of. There
is a great deal we can gain from better designed buildings, and with
your help and your commitment, I look forward to seeing many more
outstanding public buildings in the future. |
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