Quantity Surveyor
Quantity Surveyor
Quantity Surveyor
A quantity surveyor manages all costs relating to building and civil engineering projects, from the initial calculations to
the final figures.
Surveyors seek to minimise the costs of a project and enhance value for money, while still achieving the required
standards and quality. Many of these are specified by statutory building regulations, which the surveyor needs to
understand and adhere to.
A quantity surveyor may work for either the client or the contractor, working in an office or on site. They are involved
in a project from the start, preparing estimates and costs of the work.
When the project is in progress, quantity surveyors keep track of any variations to the contract that may affect costs
and create reports to show profitability.
The title of the job may also be referred to as a construction cost consultant or commercial manager.
Typical work activities
Responsibilities vary depending on the nature and stage of the project being worked on, but can include:
preparing tender and contract documents, including bills of quantities with the architect and/or the client;
Areas that may be worked on once the surveyor has experience and specialised knowledge include:
providing post-occupancy advice, facilities management services and life cycle costing advice;
assisting clients in locating and accessing additional and alternative sources of funds;
QUANTITY SURVEYOR
The quantity surveyor is the person responsible for figuring out just what a construction project is going to
cost. They have other roles too, especially making sure that construction costs and production are
managed as efficiently as possible.
Quantity surveyors have this title because they prepare a schedule of quantities estimates of the
material and labour costs that contractors tenders can be measured against. (However, contractors
are not selected for cost alone.) The schedule is also called a cost estimate.
Other names for people employed with quantity surveying qualifications include estimator, cost engineer,
cost manager, cost analyst, project coordinator, project cost controller and cost planner.
Quantity surveyors main roles are:
managing the finances for any kind of construction project, whether its a house, a
high-rise, a bridge, or a tunnel
making sure that construction costs and production are managed as efficiently as
possible
houses.
Before the project, the quantity surveyors calculate a budget based on their client's requirements. They
prepare detailed estimates to ensure the budget is sufficient for each stage of construction.
Their main task is to find out what a construction project will cost, including materials, labour, and
services.
When construction is over, the quantity surveyor adds up the total cost
The quantity surveyor can prepare a statement of final account, which records the actual
costs for all sections of the job.