Pictured: Darren Green, senior project manager from Shaylor,
a finalist in the Construction Manager of the Year Awards
A senior project manager from a West Midlands based construction
company is one of only ten finalists in his category in the
prestigious Construction Manager of the Year Awards.
Darren Green, from Shaylor Group, which provides building and
construction solutions to a wide range of customers in both the
public and private sectors, has been named as a finalist in the
housing/accommodation projects over £6m category.
The Construction Manager of the Year Awards has celebrated
excellence in construction since 1979 and the roll of past medal
winners represents the cream of the industry. The award ceremony
and gala dinner takes place on Thursday 13th October at the
Marriott Grosvenor Hotel Park lane in London.
A spokesman for the awards said: "No other awards in the
construction industry are subject to the level of judging and
scrutiny that the Chartered Institute of Building (CIOB) applies to
these awards. This is why the Construction Manager of the Year
Awards is so highly prized and year after year the industry's top
managers are nominated for consideration. Over 1100 of the movers
and shakers of the construction industry make a point of attending
the awards evening."
These awards are open to site-based project managers with
overall responsibility for the delivery of any UK construction
project; they are given to the individuals for their own project
management work, not to their projects.
Stephen Shaylor, CEO of Shaylor Group, said: "I am delighted
that Darren has reached the finals in these important industry
awards. Reaching the top ten in the UK is a huge achievement and a
reflection of his commitment and consistently high standards of
professionalism that Darren applies to his work."
Darren has been nominated for his success on the Bondcare,
Bromford Lane, Birmingham project, which included the design and
construction of a 116 bed three storey extra care facility. The
project was to the value of £5.99 million and took 43 weeks
to complete.