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‘The virus tested every part of residential construction’

Residential construction management specialist Gavin Skelly explains how covid-19 affected his business – and how the projects he worked on have kept going

Like the country generally, construction wasn’t prepared for covid-19. Many industries were shut down, but construction didn’t know where it stood. Building a hospital was obviously ‘essential work’. But what about housebuilding, which would at least help keep people in work and the economy going?

Our business works for residential developers and contractors, providing consulting and construction management services, delivering projects from appraisal stage right through to completion. This gave us a wide perspective on how covid-19 affected the sector. When the general lockdown was introduced, there was utter chaos. The virus tested every part of the system – relationships up and downstream.

Some subcontractors and main contractors immediately shut up shop, seeing furlough as a way of protecting overhead costs. Other sites tried to struggle on without any idea of who would be on site from one day to the next. With manufacturers closing down, many subcontractors were left without materials. Utility companies vanished over the hill without any explanation of when they would be back. Monitoring surveyors were told to stop visiting sites, clients were demanding answers on project timescales, while banks were asking about protection of risk and not allowing a single penny to be drawn without absolute surety. 

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