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Construction Manager of the Year Awards 2020: Public and infrastructure
Gold winner: Kristian Cartwright MCIOB
Willmott Dixon
Project: The Box, Plymouth
Scope: Refurbishment of heritage buildings and construction of extension, completed in 131 weeks
Client: Plymouth City Council
Contract: JCT traditional
Value: £28m
This high-profile museum projectmarked the 400th-anniversary celebrations of the Mayflower setting sail from Plymouth for the New World, combining heritage with new build.
Kristian Cartwright’s foresight and local knowledge were vital, for example, he picked out a cladding system suited to the marine environment which didn’t bust the budget.
He developed the structural steel solution that allowed 14 ships’ figureheads (weighing up to 2.5 tonnes apiece) to be suspended from a fire-rated slab.
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Other technical challenges Cartwright overcame included squeezing a tower crane in between bomb-damaged ground, a 17th-century culvert and the site access road, designing the formwork for an 8m concrete cantilever 11m off the ground, and building gallery walls 20m long and 5m high without day joints to ensure the best finish.
His conservation experience and carpentry background ensured joinery-grade tolerances and finishes for humble materials and junctions not usually subject to such scrutiny, resulting in a high-quality delivery throughout.
Silver winner: Russ Parks MCIOB
Willmott Dixon
Project: The Futurist, Demolition and Stabilisation, Scarborough
Scope: Demolition of theatre and cliff stabilisation works, completed in 76 weeks
Client: Scarborough Borough Council
Contract: NEC 3, Scape 3 framework
Value: £3.9m
A former infantry commander, RussParks took charge of this technically tricky demolition of a seafront theatre building combined with stabilisation works for the 40m-high cliff behind.
The location was surrounded by residential and business properties, and Parks engaged with the local community face to face, while keeping the site secure with round-the-clock CCTV, perimeter sensors and guard patrols.
He used geotechnical modelling to plan the removal of 6,000 tonnes of ground-weight from the upper cliff slope, which was stabilised with soil anchors. When the theatre was demolished, following an extensive demolition strip, work to remove the main retaining wall began, only for the ground sensors to reveal movement in the cliff slope. After a 12-week delay while various engineering solutions were considered, 34 pairs of 17m-long sheet piles were driven in to secure the slop and complete the job.
Other finalists:
Kevin Alden MCIOB Sir Robert McAlpine, Newcastle Civic Centre
Paul Clarke MCIOB Willmott Dixon, Liverpool Echo Arena Car Park
Brian Hanlon MCIOB: Highly Commended Willmott Dixon, Merseyside Police Patrol Hub, Liverpool
John Stedman MCIOB Morgan Sindall Construction and Infrastructure, West Suffolk Operational Hub, Bury St Edmunds
Simon Whittingham MCIOB Willmott Dixon, Exeter Police Station
The January/February 2026 issue of Construction Management magazine is now available to read in digital format.
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