Limited Company | |
Industry | Construction |
Founded | 2008 |
Headquarters | London, United Kingdom |
Key people
|
James Wates CBE (Chairman), Stephen Ratcliffe (Director) |
Number of employees
|
4 |
Website | www.ukcg.org.uk |
From January 2009 until September 2015, the UK Contractors Group (UKCG) was the primary association for construction contractors operating in the UK. In September 2015, it merged with the National Specialist Contractors Council to form Build UK.
Established in January 2009, it succeeded the Major Contractors Group and the National Contractors Federation which had until that point represented the views of the leading UK contractors.
The UKCG represented over thirty leading contractors operating in the UK on constructions specific issues. Between them, UKCG members accounted for £33 billion of construction turnover – a third of UK construction total output.
UKCG's mission was to promote the UK construction industry and to support its members in delivering excellence by encouraging contractors to work together with their clients and supply chains to promote change and best practice. From the UKCG website:
It was one of two organisations that represented the views of contractors on the Strategic Forum for Construction, along with the Construction Alliance.
UKCG also worked closely with the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) Construction Council to ensure that contractors' interests were properly reflected in the wider business agenda.
UKCG commissioned the business consultants LEK to produce an independent report on the contribution construction makes to the UK economy. This report, "Construction in the UK economy: The Benefits of Investment", was updated in May 2012, and showed that spending on construction significantly benefitted the UK economy. It also claimed that construction was the best sector to stimulate employment.
UKCG published in 2011 further research showing the contribution construction was making to the English regions, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The research, undertaken by the economic consultancy Cebr and Glenigan showed the pattern of construction activity to be variable across the UK.
This campaign was followed by "Creating Britain's Future" launched in the Autumn of 2012, aiming to build on the industry's successful delivery of the London Olympics infrastructure by showing that the UK construction industry was: (1) important to the UK economy, (2) a driver of growth, (3) delivering excellent products, and (4) helping change lives.