Product category:
Partitions
News Release from: British Gypsum
Edited by the Buildingtalk Editorial
Team on 27 June 2006
Architect beats off sharks
Liverpool architect has won an LCD TV in an online deep-sea challenge game organised by the suppliers of Gypframe drylining metal framework.
A Liverpool architect has successfully navigated shark-infested waters to win a state-of-the art LCD TV, in an online deep-sea challenge game organised by the suppliers of Gypframe drylining metal framework Nick Serridge, who is based in the Liverpool office of leading commercial architectural practice, Nightingale Associates, gained the maximum score in the game, which required entrants to beat the sharks and reach the safety of a protective Gypframe cage in a multi-level challenge that got gradually more difficult as the game progressed
This article was originally published on Buildingtalk on 7 Jul 2005 at 8.00am (UK)
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Specialising in the healthcare, science and education sectors, Nightingale Associates are major specifiers of Gypframe-based partition and walling systems, which are increasingly used to meet demanding fire, acoustic and impact-resisting criteria in hospitals and schools.
UK drylining market leader, British Gypsum, devised the popular online viral game to highlight the exceptional strength characteristics of their Gypframe metal components, which provide the backbone of all of their SpecSure lifetime warranted systems.
Nick was presented with his prize, a Philips 26" LCD TV, by Sean Mills, British Gypsum's local Area Technical Support Manager.
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