Multi-disciplinary approach to problem-solving routed in our.
team in July 2014, having previously worked in architectural firms in Spain, and after graduating from San Pablo CEU University in Spain in 2013..Her experience includes public and urban spaces, residential development as well as sustainability and landscape projects.

During her start at Bryden Wood, Cristina was involved in the design and feasibility study of a pharmaceutical project in Nigeria for GlaxoSmithKline.Working as part of a team her key focus was to coordinate the cross discipline information to clarify the best options to take forward into design.After that, she collaborated in the design and development of residential plots in Sugar House Island.. Having gathered experience in a variety of sectors, Cristina is currently the architect for the Front End Factory GSK Project, working with information of a sensitive nature.

Cristina is extending her skills for design coordination in the fields of Pharmaceuticals and Biopharma.Rosa qualified in architecture at the ETSAB, the College of Architecture of Barcelona, Polytechnic University of Catalonia.. She joined.the architectural team.

of Bryden Wood in 2015, having previously worked in architectural firms in Spain and the US, focusing on Urban & Public Space design, as well as Commercial & Residential design respectively..
Since joining Bryden Wood in 2015, Rosa has been involved in a variety of schemes developed through the use of.Design the business case first to avoid missing ways to discover what value looks like.
The industry is reinventing how design and construction happen but to do this all parties must be involved as early as possible in the project, ideally when the client is beginning to conceive the business problem they must solve.The first place to start innovation is around the definition of customer value and the range of options that might exist to help a client achieve that value.. 3.
Working standards and efficiency are paramount.As we move into a DfMA world, it’s important that progress is influenced by the workers who are going to be installing the work, and that they are given the opportunity to do their jobs in the safest, best way possible.
(Editor: Heavy-Duty Blenders)