• Accredited as an Investor in Diversity 2011
  • Reducing our carbon footprint by 5% annually
  • Five Times LABC Built in Quality Award Winner 2011
  • Housing Excellence Regeneration Scheme of the Year 2011
  • Investor in People Accredited
  • 2011 ROSPA Bronze Award Winner for Health and Safety
  • Voted as a Best Company to Work for 2011, 2010 and 2009
  • Working Towards Investors in Diversity 2011
  • Health and Safety OHSAS 18001 Accredited
  • Positive About Disabled People Accredited Organisation
  • Environmental ISO14001 Accredited
  • Quality Assurance ISO9001 2008 Accredited
  • £72m Group Turnover in 2010
  • CSCS Certified in house test centre
  • CSCS Platinum status - over 90% of our staff are registered
  • 10% of our workforce are Apprentice and Trainees
  • Over 340 skilled and qualified construction professionals employed
  • Dedicated staff volunteering scheme, Escalate in the Community

Cruden Get HAPPI

Cruden Get HAPPI PictureCruden Get HAPPI PictureCruden Get HAPPI Picture
Friday 9th July 2010

Cruden, along with client Helena Partnership and Designer DK Architects are delighted to receive the HAPPI Award 2010 for the impressive Heald Farm Court development in Newton Le Willows.

The Housing and Aging Population Panel for Innovation (HAPPI) Judges found that Heald Farm Court encapsulated life affirming features in homes for the over 55's, as promoted in last years HAPPI report that gathered good practice from Europe to improve housing for older people.

This scheme has the crafted elegance of an Oxbridge quad. Many of its 86 2-bed apartments for market sale, rent and shared ownership are presented as terraces of gable-fronted villas. Faced in a mix of smart brickwork and bronzed copper cladding with dark powder-coated windows and generous balconies, the detailing is consistently smart throughout, from wide corridors panelled in dark woods serving the apartments, to solid oak planters and a carved stone Heald Farm Court sign.


The mix of independent living and extra care has 850 m2 of facilities intended to serve as a village hub for another 166 properties in the surrounding area, including new bungalows developed simultaneously on a remote site.


So the layout has to work for three distinct users: the visitor must feel welcome, the self-reliant resident should not feel institutionalised, and the more dependent should feel secure. The design does this by dividing apartments into three blocks enveloping a services hub. The most independent-minded residents live in the street frontage block along Sturgess Street and can nip over to the hub under a covered walkway. Frailer residents are able to access the services without going outdoors, routes helpfully short and direct for those whose sense of direction is a little fuzzy.


There are two routes for the visitor into the hub, one pedestrian and one vehicular, which converge at the concierge desk at the mouth of the services hub. Once signed in, visitors have access to a range of dining, leisure and healthcare facilities, including spas and a huge games room. Although these are aimed at those in retirement, no-one interested in joining in is turned away and MHA reports that the hub has become the area's liveliest resort with activities drawing a few users still in their 40s.


Between the hub and accommodation blocks are landscaped spaces, which are fully enclosed for protection to the back of the site but are more open on the street side so visitors can also enjoy them, although widely overlooked so that anyone entering them is surveilled.


The scheme is both heated and cooled with heat pumps feeding off 10 deep bore holes and hot water is provided by a solar thermal system.






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