The Forge: The world's first P-DfMA commercial office building opens in London

We also wanted to map out all of the different typologies it was possible to build, in order to create a common language with which to talk about housing.

This includes a thorough understanding of network technologies and various operating systems, which gives him the ability to diagnose a wide variety of issues.. Zydrunas has worked on many significant projects at Bryden Wood such as implementing the Internal Backup System, upgrading the company’s hardware and software, connecting and setting up a branch offices.Adrian is a chartered chemical engineer with over thirty years’ experience in the design and development of biochemical and chemical processes and facilities.Since joining Bryden Wood in 2018, he has played a leading role in a wide range of front-end projects and the development of.

The Forge: The world's first P-DfMA commercial office building opens in London

Bryden Wood’s industrial sectors capability.Adrian currently leads the growing process engineering team at Bryden Wood, further adapting the practice of design to value, integrated design,.design for manufacture and assembly.

The Forge: The world's first P-DfMA commercial office building opens in London

to a range of pharmaceutical, biotechnology, industrial and process sector projects.. Adrian’s previous roles span major engineering and construction companies, blue-chip manufacturing, and consultancy, across Europe, the US and Singapore.Prior to joining Bryden Wood, he led the technical development and process engineering on complex projects in diverse sectors, particularly pharmaceuticals and vaccines but extending to food, fine chemicals, consumer products, battery technology, industrial fibres, waste treatment and nuclear.

The Forge: The world's first P-DfMA commercial office building opens in London

His roles have included lead process engineer and technology manager on numerous projects, head of process engineering and technology director and project management.

In the latter he has specialised in early-stage project development, working in British Nuclear Group’s decommissioning group and with GSK’s global project development group (the ‘front-end-factory’)..We have seen clients who already have Reference Designs (also called template designs).

However, with no rules for how to adapt this Reference Design to local sites, the delivery teams can end up unravelling it and are back with new designs..Many, if not most clients, need designs that can respond to unique sites and needs e.g.

for a healthcare facility the design needs to be flexible to accommodate specific clinical specialisms and the demographics of a particular region..So how can a Reference Design both standardise a design, yet leave enough flexibility to adapt it to any given brief?.