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BAM April 2017

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Kouwe 81
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quote:

Beurs2020 schreef op 26 april 2017 17:17:

Hoppa daar ging even 60K (meer dan 300.000 euro) over de toonbank. Dat is geen particuler c.q. wat institutionele beleggers zijn nu ook wakker.
Ik ben gewoon particulier hoor...
snipper
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quote:

Beurs2020 schreef op 26 april 2017 17:17:

Hoppa daar ging even 60K (meer dan 300.000 euro) over de toonbank. Dat is geen particuler c.q. wat institutionele beleggers zijn nu ook wakker.
..hoppa...koers staaat 1 cent hoger..ff slotveiling afwachten..
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Kouwe 81 schreef op 26 april 2017 17:23:

[...]

Ik ben gewoon particulier hoor...
lolz, hier ook hoor :-)
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Nog twee weken tot de cijfers en update over de vooruitzichten; kan haast niet wachten !
Kouwe 81
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€d_Modus Vivendi schreef op 26 april 2017 17:49:

slot 5,159 het kan niet op! 115502 stuks Bam + 0,41% Heij + 0,98%
Hoezo kan het niet op?
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Kouwe 81 schreef op 26 april 2017 18:06:

[...]

Hoezo kan het niet op?
Slot op 21 april 4,89 en nu al 5,16 (excl. 9 cent dividend). Het kan niet op.
€d_Modus Vivendi
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In de Midkap vielen er weinig grote uitslagen te ontdekken, al was Besi de sterkte daler met een verlies van 2,6 procent. Gisteren steeg Besi nog met dubbele cijfers op goed ontvangen kwartaalresultaten.
Het Ierse kabinet heeft de bouw van het nationale kinderziekenhuis in Dublin, waar de Nederlandse BAM Groep mogelijk aan gaat werken, inmiddels goedgekeurd. Een woordvoerder van BAM zei tegen ABM Financial News dat zodra een handtekening is gezet het bouwbedrijf beleggers zal informeren. De klus zou een waarde van circa 1 miljard euro vertegenwoordigen. De koers van BAM steeg 0,4 procent. (*het kan niet op!)
€d_Modus Vivendi
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Building work to begin on national children's hospital as costs soar to 1bn euro
An artist's impression of the new hospital (Children's Hospital Group/PA Wire)
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An artist's impression of the new hospital (Children's Hospital Group/PA Wire)

April 26 2017 4:51 PM




It will be another four-and-a-half years before the new national children's hospital opens, Health Minister Simon Harris has said.

Originally promised for late 2016 and then for early 2018, d elays and dispute over the location at St James's in Dublin's south inner city have seen costs balloon by 200 million euro to 1 billion euro, reportedly the most expensive paediatric facility in the world.

Mr Harris blamed the spiralling price tag on soaring construction costs, a longer than anticipated planning, procurement and approvals process, and the tenders coming in at a higher than forecast price.

"Today is a huge step forward for the children's hospital project, ending years of doubt as to whether it would ever be built. Today, there is no more doubt," the minister said.

Selecting the site of the children's hospital has been dogged by more than a decade of opposition, with the original plan for the Mater having to be shelved after 40 million euro was spent on it and the continued warnings from some campaigners the inner city site will run into traffic and access problems.

But building work at St James's will begin in weeks.

The state-of-the-art facility will incorporate Our Lady's Children's Hospital, Crumlin and Children's University Hospital Temple Street and the paediatric service at Tallaght.

The new Coombe Women and Infants University Hospital will also be built on the campus once the children's facility is finished so adult, paediatric and maternity services are all being planned for the one location.

It will also care for sick babies and children from Northern Ireland.

The new hospital will have 380 single rooms with en-suite bathrooms and a bed for a parent, including 60 critical care rooms incorporating paediatric and neonatology intensive care/high dependency, and 20 child and adolescent mental health beds which will be open to patients with eating disorders and acute conditions.

There will be a " rooftop rainbow garden" offering what the planners said will be a secure and sheltered environment beside wards.

A Children's Research and Innovation Centre, funded entirely through philanthropy, will also be built at St James's giving staff the chance to study, evaluate and improve the services.

The campus will be home to a hospital school, underground parking, specialist therapy and play facilities, 93 daycare bays, 22 operating theatres and procedure rooms, and 122 consulting rooms.

The A&E will have 12 short stay observation beds and 36 assessment bays.

While the construction at St James's is ongoing, two p aediatric outpatient and urgent care centres at Tallaght and Connolly hospitals are due to open at the end of 2018 and the early part of 2019.

The Department of Health said the two smaller facilities will offer children consultant-led care, observation beds, diagnostics and secondary outpatient services including rapid access to general paediatric clinics, developmental checks and multidisciplinary care for chronic stable conditions.

The total cost for the children's hospitals and the two other units will be 1.07 billion euro.

Back in 2014, it was originally expected to cost 650 million euro.

Mr Harris said that calculation did not include equipment, educational facilities, shops or car parking - which are estimated to run to 140 million euro.

Another 110 million euro is to be spent on energy, clinical decontamination and facilities management.

The Department of Health said another 183 million euro has been added to the cost from construction inflation, planning and procurement delays and higher tendering costs.

Fianna Fail's health spokesman Billy Kelleher said no further delays will be tolerated.

"At last, we have final confirmation and approval from the Government. This much-needed piece of national health infrastructure has been too long in the making, and it is now time to proceed with haste to deliver it as quickly as possible, and in as cost effective way as possible," he said.

Press Association
€d_Modus Vivendi
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The new children’s hospital: what’s taking so long?
The latest completion projection is now late 2021 or early 2022, almost 40 years after the first proposal
33 minutes ago
Harry McGee

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2017: Simon Harris TD, with Eilish Hardiman Group CEO of the Children’s Hospital and John Pollock Project Director NCH at St.James’s making an announcement regarding the new National Children’s Hospital at St.James’s Hospital Dublin. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons

2017: Simon Harris TD, with Eilish Hardiman Group CEO of the Children’s Hospital and John Pollock Project Director NCH at St.James’s making an announcement regarding the new National Children’s Hospital at St.James’s Hospital Dublin. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons



It is 33 years since the idea of a new children’s hospital was first mooted and it looks like it will take almost four decades for that plan to be realised.

In 1984, it was agreed that the Temple Street Children’s Hospital was ageing and unsuitable for modern medical use. An upgrade was approved back then but in the subsequent years plans were either long-fingered or shelved.

As time progressed, paediatric medicine continued to be provided in Temple Street, Crumlin and Tallaght - each location with significant limitations in terms of space and facilities.

Then in 1999, a plan was unveiled for a new children’s hospital for the northside of Dublin, to be located on the site of the Mater Hospital in Dublin. The plan was announced by taoiseach Bertie Ahern, whose Dublin Central constituency it was in, and then health minister Brian Cowen. It would replace Temple Street Children’s Hospital. With funding of £230 million (€292 million) the project was managed by Laura Magahy, who was also involved with the doomed National Stadium, aka ‘Bertie Bowl’.
2001: The unveiling of the model of the Development Control Plan for the Mater & Children’s Hospital Developments, promising a new hospital campus on a derelict car-park site of the Mater Misericordiae Hospital in Eccles Street, Dublin. (L-R) Ms Laura Magahy, of Magahy and Company. Sr. Helena O’Donoghue chairperson, MCHD. The Minister for Health Mr Martin and Mr Martin Cowley chief executive officer, Mater Misericordiae Hospital. Photograph: The Irish Times 2001: The unveiling of the model of the Development Control Plan for the Mater & Children’s Hospital Developments, promising a new hospital campus on a derelict car-park site of the Mater Misericordiae Hospital in Eccles Street, Dublin.

That plan was itself jettisoned in 2006 by then minister for health Mary Harney. Instead she formed a quango, the National Paediatric Hospital Development Board, with the express aim of building a new National Children’s Hospital to replace the three Dublin children’s hospitals.

The rationale behind the strategy seemed sound. There was a clear need for a national paediatric services with state-of-the-art facilities and equipment, which would provide specialist and general services for sick children. It would be trilocated with a teaching adult hospital and a maternity hospital (to come further down the line). The budget had now been raised to between €650 million and €700 million.

The choice of the Mater site was controversial. Labour’s Jan O’Sullivan described it as another decision where Bertie Ahern could “bring home the bacon to Drumcondra”.

As usual there were overly-optimistic projections about the completion date - with some predicting it would open its doors in 2012.
2009: Mary Harney TD, Minister for Health and Children, during the announcement of the design team appointed for the new Children’s Hospital of Ireland. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons 2009: Mary Harney TD, Minister for Health and Children, during the announcement of the design team appointed for the new Children’s Hospital of Ireland. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons

€d_Modus Vivendi
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The project proceeded apace for the next few years, even when the first chill winds of the recession began to bite. It was one of the first big projects to apply for planning permission under the Planning and Development (Amendment) Act 2010, which essentially allowed big projects to fast-track the process.

However, problems were beginning to emerge. The first was in early 2010 when a prominent doctor, heart specialist Maurice Neligan, announced that he no longer favoured the site and claimed he had been “hoodwinked” by those in favour of the project.
2010: Eilish Hardiman, Chief Executive, National Paediatric Hospital Development Board, and Sean Mahon, Lead Architect, look at a model of the proposed new Children’s Hospital. Photograph: Eric Luke / THE IRISH TIMES 2010: Eilish Hardiman, Chief Executive, National Paediatric Hospital Development Board, and Sean Mahon, Lead Architect, look at a model of the proposed new Children’s Hospital. Photograph: Eric Luke

Several months later, in October, the chairman of the development board for the new hospital, businessman Philip Lynch, also resigned. Around that time, several prominent consultants began to openly question the site, claiming the city centre location would increase traffic congestion and make it hard to access for families coming from outside Dublin.

The change of government in early 2011 saw a new minister, James Reilly, raising some questions about the site. At that stage, some €30 million had been reportedly spent on this large-scale project. In March that year he ordered a review, which was completed in July. The review, which was widely welcomed in political circles, backed the Mater.

With an opening scheduled for 2015, it seemed that the debate had been settled. However, in February 2012, An Bord Pleanála delivered a bombshell when it refused planning permission for the project.
2012: Health Minister James Reilly TD at the Government Press Centre Dublin announcing that St James Hospital Dublin would be the location for the new National Children’s Hospital. Photograph: Bryan O’Brien 2012: Health Minister James Reilly TD at the Government Press Centre Dublin announcing that St James Hospital Dublin would be the location for the new National Children’s Hospital. Photograph: Bryan O’Brien

Its ruling described the planned hospital as a “dominant visual incongruous structure which would have a profound negative impact on the appearance and visual amenity of the city skyline”.

Scrambling politically, the minister appointed an expert group chaired by Frank Dolphin to review the planning decision and to suggest different options. Mr Reilly said he was “not wedded” to the Mater site.

The group looked at a number of sites including the Mater, St James Hospital, Connolly Hospital in Blanchardstwon and a green field site in Belcamp, North Dublin. The decision on which to choose was ultimately left to Government.

There was some turbulence and disagreement between Fine Gael and Labour over this issue in the run-up to the final announcement, but in November 2012, St James’s was chosen ahead of the other rivals. Among its main advantages were that it was already a teaching hospital with a large array of specialisms, and in close proximity to a maternity hospital (The Coombe).

The same criticisms that had been made of the Mater were now made of the St James site. It was a city centre site. There would not be enough capacity for traffic. Public transport would be difficult. Why not opt for a green-field site near the M50, easily accessible by families from all over the country?

NUI Galway president Dr Jim Browne became chair of the board, with Eilish Hardiman appointed as chief executive (as she had been of the orginal plan). In April 2016, it received its final planning permission.
Minister for Health Simon Harris TD, with eight-year-old diabetc patient Grace Cawley from Donaghmede photographed during the turning of the sod to mark the commencement of phase one of construction of the new Children’s Hospital at St James’s Hospital, Dublin. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons 2017: Minister for Health Simon Harris TD, with eight-year-old diabetc patient Grace Cawley from Donaghmede photographed during the turning of the sod to mark the commencement of phase one of construction of the new Children’s Hospital at St James’s Hospital, Dublin. Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons

At that stage, the budget was still being stated as €700 million. Acting minister for health, Leo Varadkar, was guilty of minor hubris when he confidently predicted it would be ready by 2020 “short of an asteroid hitting the planet”.

This newspaper’s health correspondent Paul Cullen reported in February that the cost would now be €1 billion, making it the second most expensive hospital in the world, after the Royal in Adelaide (cost €2.2 billion). There will be 1,000 car parking spaces and it will be the largest building project ever undertaken in Ireland.

Of course, an asteroid has also hit the planet. The latest completion projection is now late 2021 or early 2022, almost 40 years after the first modest proposal to upgrade Temple Street children’s hospital.

www.irishtimes.com/news/health/the-ne...
Lady GakGak
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Blijft toch een bijzonder fonds. Op 6 juli 2016, minder dan een jaar geleden, was het nog 2,96 euro. Bijzonder prettig en perspectiefrijk trouwens.
bartbas
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quote:

Ai Caramba schreef op 26 april 2017 21:27:

Blijft toch een bijzonder fonds. Op 6 juli 2016, minder dan een jaar geleden, was het nog 2,96 euro. Bijzonder prettig en perspectiefrijk trouwens.
En nog weer 6 maanden eerder stonden rond de 5 euro. Daarmee vergeleken heeft de koers nauwelijks iets gedaan. Met traden viel wel een kapitaal te verdienen.

Bartbas
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