Keeping sustainable construction on the agenda
Acknowledging construction and the built environment's contributions to climate change.
Saul is the current Vice President of the Chartered Institute of Building. His Presidential term starts next year. Saul is the current holder of the Chartered Institute of Building’s National Sustainability Award.
Saul is also the Managing Partner of his own consultancy practice eponymously named as Saul D Humphrey LLP. The practice is B Corp (certified). He is an experienced Managing Director, Consultant, Property Investor/Developer and Construction/Project Manager in the Construction sector, specialising in Sustainable Construction. He previously led R G Carter Construction in the East and was Managing Director of Morgan Sindall Construction (East) before starting his own consultancy in 2019.
Saul is Professor of Sustainable Construction at Anglia Ruskin University. He is also the Chair of the Institute of Directors (Norfolk and Suffolk) and Chair of Building Growth (the construction, housing and property development sector group covering Norfolk and Suffolk).
Saul is also a Non-Executive Director of Great Yarmouth Borough Council's housing development/property companies, Equinox Property Holdings Limited and Equinox Enterprises Limited; Non-Executive Director/Independent Member of Norwich City Council’s East Norwich Strategic Regeneration Area (ENSRA) Delivery Board; and he is the Managing Director (Designate) of Human Nature (Hethel).
Saul is an Ambassador of Norfolk Constructing Excellence Club (NCEC); Norfolk Community Foundation's “Good for Good”; Changing Streams CIC; and he is the East of England past President, and past National Director, of the National Federation of Builders (NFB).
Saul is a Member of the United Kingdom Green Building Council; Suffolk Sustainability Institute (University of Suffolk); Norfolk Net Zero Advisory Board; a Construction Leadership Council CO2nstructZero Business Partner; and Trustee of Construction East. Saul also volunteers for Sounding Board and Norfolk ProHelp, now known as "Good for Good."