
MaST LIFT
MaST LIFT
3 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2008 - 2012Partners:University of Salford, Sheppard Robson, Urban Vision Partnership Ltd, New East Manchester, Arup Group Ltd +16 partnersUniversity of Salford,Sheppard Robson,Urban Vision Partnership Ltd,New East Manchester,Arup Group Ltd,Urban Vision Partnership Ltd,MaST LIFT,RENEW Northwest,Sustainability North West,Arup Group (United Kingdom),MaST LIFT,Arup Group,Manchester Digital Development Agency,Sheppard Robson,Wates (United Kingdom),Manchester Digital Development Agency,RENEW Northwest,New East Manchester,University of Salford,Wates Construction,Sustainability North WestFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/F007213/1Funder Contribution: 2,311,090 GBPThe overall aim of the SURegen consortium is to undertake research to develop a prototype Regeneration Simulator Workbench (RSW) that meets the decision-making challenges that Sustainable Urban Regeneration (SUR) poses, i.e., multiple stakeholder interests, complexity, uncertainty and ambiguity. The RSW will provide a major new training vehicle for regeneration professionals aimed at addressing the knowledge and skills gap identified in the Egan Review: Skills for Sustainable Communities (2004) and will be built around the core set of regeneration skills included in RENEW NW's development of the 8point Egan Wheel . The RSW is aimed at regeneration professionals and knowledgeable non-experts and will focus on the neighbourhood scale. It will form a multi-perspective collaborative digital workspace providing a learning laboratory and library of good practice for regeneration actors. Past experience shows that 'simulation' of SUR activity requires an open-ended, process-based, learning and gaming-like experience. A conventional technical model system, no matter how sophisticated, is unlikely to deal with the tacit knowledge, complex actor-network relationships, and strategic behaviour or entrepreneurial opportunities. For instance, an effective housing module needs technical information on density, tenure, condition and so on, but it also needs some way of dealing with the perception of different actors on, for example, the effect of gentrification on crime or property values. To address this, the RSW will enable the simulation of the regeneration programme process and help decision-makers recognise the key decision points and guide them towards appropriate evaluations that will support their decision-making. To do this the workbench will contain a number of simulation and evaluation tools and integrate the complex range of data on the sustainable redevelopment of the regeneration area. Use of these tools will enable regeneration actors to collectively simulate a range of outcomes of the longer-term regeneration programme. From this foresight they will gain insights into the impact of selected options that result from the complex interactions of political, social, economic and physical factors that will enable them to make better trade-offs between options and move towards more satisfying sustainable solutions. They will also be able retrace their steps and explore other options so that they can learn from potential mistakes .The project will be led by the University of Salford in collaboration with the Universities of Manchester, Napier, Liverpool, Dundee and West of England. Using an action research methodology the workbench will incorporate the knowledge of good practice in regeneration from the a range of public sector and industrial partners, representing both demand and supply side interests from NW England; including the regional centre of excellence for regeneration skills, RENEW North West, Sustainability Northwest, the Manchester Digital Development Agency, Cities of Manchester and Salford, Urban Vision, Arup Assoc, Wates Construction, ABRA Assoc, MASTLift, Shepherd Robson and Fusion GFX. The project is planned for four years duration. The first two years will focus on knowledge capture and structuring using action research. This will also focus on case studies in New East Manchester and Salford Liverpool Road. The last two years will address testing and validation of the prototype workbench in these case study areas as well as others, with collaborators from other regions of the UK, to validate and develop the workbench to be more generally applicable to all areas of the country.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2011Partners:I B M United Kingdom Ltd, Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust, Salford Primary Care Trust, Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust, Davis Langdon LLP +87 partnersI B M United Kingdom Ltd,Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust,Salford Primary Care Trust,Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust,Davis Langdon LLP,Mersey Care NHS Trust,University of Illinois,Unlimited Potential,Leicestershire County Council,University College Hospital,Inter Academy for Design and Health UK,Frimley Park Hospital NHS Foundation Trust,University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign,Wates Construction,Loughborough University,BWB Consulting,Chalmers University of Technology,Wates (United Kingdom),Berkshire Healthcare NHS Fdn Trust,ActivePlan Solutions Ltd,MANCHESTER CITY COUNCIL,Davis Langdon LLP,Willmott Dixon Construction Ltd,ActivePlan Solutions Ltd,P and HS Architects,Willmott Dixon (United Kingdom),Architects for Health,Leicestershire County Council,University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust,ArcHealth,Leicester City Council,Purdue University,Huazhong University of Science and Technology,Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust,Tribal Group,Manchester City Council,MaST LIFT,LEICESTER CITY COUNCIL,University Hospitals of Leicester NHS,IBM (United Kingdom),Unlimited Potential,Lend Lease (United Kingdom),West Sussex Primary Care Trust,MJ Medical,MJ Medical,Clean Modules Ltd,Health Facilities Scotland,Loughborough University,West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust,National Health Service,Brighton and Sussex Uni Hosp NHS Trust,West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust,Architects for Health,University College London Hospitals,Purdue University West Lafayette,Salford Primary Care Trust,Heatherwood and Wexham Park Hospitals,Leicester City Council,Eric Wright Group,NHS London,Complexity Solutions Ltd,National Audit Office,National Health Service Scotland,Clean Modules Ltd,ArcHealth,WAPMERR,Chalmers University of Technology,Imperial College London,Mace Ltd,University College London Hospital (UCLH) NHS Foundation Trust,YRM Architects,MaST LIFT,Mersey Care NHS Trust,Berkshire Healthcare NHS Fdn Trust,NHS London,Mace (United Kingdom),Inter Academy for Design and Health UK,World Agency of Planetary Monitoring & Earthquake Risk Reduction,Complexity Solutions Ltd,YRM Architects,P and HS Architects,Manchester City Council,Bovis Lend Lease,Tribal Group,Health Facilities Scotland,West Sussex Primary Care Trust,NAO,Purdue University System,Uni of Illinois at Urbana Champaign,Huazhong University of Sci and Tech,BWB Consulting,Eric Wright GroupFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/D039614/1Funder Contribution: 7,236,670 GBPModernising the UK's health and social care system is a priority for government and for the country as a whole. To do this, wide ranging organisational and funding reforms are being put in place. An unprecedented investment to renew the built and technical infrastructure for delivering care is also underway: new hospitals and primary care centres are being built, information and communication technology is being upgraded and new technologies for diagnosing and treating disease are being introduced. If world-class infrastructure is to be delivered, this investment must achieve its full potential. The aim of HaCIRIC is to establish a new research centre to help accomplish this. HaCIRIC's focus is on the built and technical infrastructure for health and social care, and the interaction between infrastructure specification and the way patients are treated. Improving the way this is planned, delivered and managed is at the core of HaCIRIC's activity. What are the challenges? The health and social care system is one of the most complex and rapidly changing organisational and technical environments in any sector of the economy. Many stakeholders are involved in delivering care, funding mechanisms are convoluted, and patterns of demand and use are changing, as are government health policies. All this places new pressures on the underlying infrastructure. These are compounded by two problems. First, there is an historic legacy of out-dated buildings and cultures within the care system. Second, the life cycles of the various elements of the infrastructure / buildings, medical and information technology / are mismatched. Each involves complex supply chains, multiple users with their own needs and differing institutional and funding arrangements. All these have to be reconciled. For example, the current PFI programme for new hospitals involves supply contracts for thirty years or more, but incorporates technologies which have five year life cycles to help deliver diagnostics and therapies which are undergoing rapid evolutionary change. Modernising the health and social care infrastructure will therefore require innovative approaches. HaCIRIC will help develop the tools and processes which will embed 'innovation as normal business' amongst those responsible for delivering the investment in infrastructure. Its research programme has been developed in partnership with all the key stakeholders from the care system, including the Department of Health, the NHS, the Department of Trade and Industry and the supply industries. Seven research themes have been identified:- Managing innovation in a context of technological change- Procurement for innovation- Innovative design and construction- Care delivery practices- Delivering improved performance through operations management- Knowledge management in complex systems - Design and evaluation of integrated systems HaCIRIC is a collaboration between existing research centres at Imperial College London and the Universities of Loughborough, Reading and Salford. Additional partners from other universities, industry and the care system will be involved in specific research projects. Together this represents a resource valued at more than 11m, of which 7.0m consists of EPSRC support, 2.9m is from the four existing research centres, 500,000 is from the Department of Trade and Industry and 720,000 is from industrial partners. HaCIRIC will therefore represent a substantial resource and a unique capability in skills and knowledge to find solutions to the key healthcare infrastructure problems of the 21st century.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2007 - 2011Partners:Manchester City Council, British Nuclear Group Project Services, Philips Electronics, FSquared Ltd, Syzygy UK Limited +111 partnersManchester City Council,British Nuclear Group Project Services,Philips Electronics,FSquared Ltd,Syzygy UK Limited,Trafford General Hospital,Interserve Project Services Ltd,Laing Technology Group Ltd,Tata Steel (United Kingdom),Balfour Beatty (United Kingdom),Birse Civils Ltd,Medlock Construction,NHS London,TNO,BAE Systems Operations Ltd,TNO,Pilkington Glass,Pilkington Group Limited,MANCHESTER CITY COUNCIL,Willmott Dixon Construction Ltd,Taylor Young,Corus,Laing Technology Group Ltd,Cruickshank and Seward Limited,Cruden Construction,IMPACT,Medlock Construction,BAE Systems,GVA Grimley,Thales Group,Pochin plc,Partnerships for Health,Trafford General Hospital,The Royal Bank of Scotland Plc,Willmott Dixon (United Kingdom),Mansell Construction Services Ltd,Keepmoat (United Kingdom),United Utilities,VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland,IMPACT,Bucknall Austin,United Utilities Water Ltd,Interserve Project Services Ltd,Taylor Young,Centre for Construction Innovation,Syzygy UK Limited,CABE,ExcellCare,MaST LIFT,Eclipse Research Consultants (United Kingdom),Bucknall Austin,Royal Bank of Scotland Plc,Cruickshank and Seward Limited,University of Salford,Cheshire West and Chester Council,University of Salford,Philips (Netherlands),The Riverside Group Ltd,Bramall Construction Ltd,Cheshire West and Chester Council,Aedas Architects,GVA Grimley,Rider Levitt Bucknall,Wates Construction,Association for Project Management,Mansell Construction Services Ltd,Department of Health - Leeds,Shepherd Construction Ltd,Pochin plc,British Nuclear Group Project Services,Eric Wright Group,Manchester City Council,VROM,United Utilities (United Kingdom),Kier Construction Ltd,BAE Systems (United Kingdom),Hays Executive,Department of Health - Leeds,ExcellCare,Riverside Housing Association Ltd,Wates (United Kingdom),Rider Levett Bucknall Ltd,PSIBouw,Birse Civils Ltd,Partnerships for Health,VROM,FSquared Ltd,Association for Project Management,Taylor Woodrow Technologies,Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research,Ernst & Young (United Kingdom),North West Ambulance Service NHS Trust,Cruden Construction,Ernst and Young,Kier Construction Ltd,Philips Research,Shepherd Construction Ltd,Ernst and Young,Thales Research Ltd,Eclipse Research Consultants,Eric Wright Group,VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland,Elevate East Lancashire,Elevate East Lancashire,VTT ,Department of Health and Social Care,Centre for Construction Innovation,National Health Service,Aedas Architects Ltd,Hays Executive,PSIBouw,North West Ambulance Service NHS Trust,Taylor Woodrow Technologies,Design Council,MaST LIFT,NHS LondonFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E001882/1Funder Contribution: 4,866,540 GBPThis proposal is concerned with the renewal of the Salford IMRC which was initially established in January 2002. This proposal will extent the life of the Salford Centre for Research and Innovation (SCRI) in the built and human environment, until 2011 and further increase the impact that the centre has created in the first five years of its lifecycle. The rolling research agenda and evolving vision of the Centre has been very well received by the industrial and academic circles, as it has been made explicit by the international assessment panels and this renewal aims to firmly establish the world class status of the centre and increase the performance of UK Plc. The centre brings together significant expertise from three research institutes within the university of Salford and aims to continue its collaboration with more that 60 partners in the industrial and academic communities internationally.
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