Construction Management
Construction Management
Construction Management
ations
Architectural Drawings:
-Floor plans
-ceiling plans
-elevations
-sections and details
-schedules
MasterFormat
-Developed by Construction Specification Institute (CSI) and Construction Specif
ications Canada (CSC)
-Master list of titles and numbers for organizing construction requirements, pro
ducts, and activities
-Used on the majority of commercial and institutional building projects in North
America
-4 Levels of Structure
-level 1: Divisions
-level 2: broad scope
-level 3: medium scope of work
-level 4: detailed scope of work
construction:
-If the ground is hard rock only anchors are needed
-If the ground is soft a mat foundation can be used to distribute the building w
eight
Cranes:
Tower Crane
-Inside footprint of structure
-Outside footprint of structure, very close to building envelope
Freestanding/Mobile crane:
-well outside footprint of structure
Types of cranes:
-Luffing Crane
-Tower
-Clock and hook
-counter jib
-jib and trolley
-Formwork is used to mould concrete (can be one sided or two sided)
Cladding- Building Science
-Units must be enclosed with exterior walls and roof before starting interior fi
nishes
-insulation
-moisture/air barriers
-exterior finishes- cladding, fenestrations (doors/windows)
Interior finishing
-Drywall, taping, priming and painting
-kitchens and bathroom fixtures and millwork, counters, tile
-light fixtures, all electronic controls
-flooring
Inspection:
-Check for building code compliance
-check for specification compliance
-fire and life safety
security to secure the performance of terms and conditions of the contract, the
n this obligation is void
Consent of Surety (time of tender)
-Provides a guarantee to the obligee that if the principal is awarded the contra
ct, then the surety company will issue the additional required project bonds, su
ch as payment or performance bonds
-Submitted with bid bond, which must accompany the bid
Performance bond
-Submitted to owner at contract signing
-Either a 50% or 100% performance bond can be purchased
-guarantees performance of contract at either 50 or 100% of contract price
Default of Performance Bond
-surety has 4 options to resolve a default on the CCDC bond form:
-In some cases, ex when cost of completion exceeds bond amount, the sure
ty may elect to pay the amount of the bond
-The obligee and surety must agree to accept a responsible bidder to com
plete the contract
-The surety will make funds available to complete the contract as work p
rogresses
-Bond covers cost of completion and other costs to a total amount up to
the bond amount.
-Law suits must be instituting within 2 years from earlier date of the substanti
al completion or when the principal was declared in default
Labour and material payment bond:
-Provides security to subs and suppliers that they will be paid according to ter
ms of their contract
-Owners request labour and material payment bonds so subs and suppliers can prov
ide better pricing if risk of nonpayment eliminated (usually 50% 0r 100%)
-Claimant:
-must have contract with principal
-claim only for goods, services supplied to job
-File claim within 120 days of last day worked or material was shipped
-Always issued with a performance bond
-Amount of bond is stipulated by owner/obligee - usually 50 or 100 of contract p
rice
-Claimant must have direct contact with the principal
-the bond covers on the obligation of the principal to claimants incurred before
the default
-claimants must file written notice to the principal, surety, and obligee by reg
istered mail within time limit required by bond. To protect claim, a suit must b
e filed by claimant within 1 year period
How does a company get bonding?
The 3 C's- what insurers/surety consider
-Character = integrity, honesty, good reputation
-Capacity= ability to complete job (management expertise, manpower and machinery
, knowledge)
-Capital = financial resources to complete job and ongoing work
Contractor insurance
-In qualifying contractors it is important to ensure that they carry sufficient
property and casualty insurance:
-property
-contractors equipment
-tools
In a title block:
-revision history
-engineers seal
-scale
-drawing number
-project name
-type of drawing
tender = estimate + contingency + overheads + profit
Quantity surveyors: produce bill of quantities, reduce tendered costs/errors
-reduces tendering costs
-reduces errors
-equal comparison for tender
estimators: mentally construct project with personnel and decide on construction
methods
- understand scope.
-site conditions, material handling, methods
Free on board (FOB): location at which the cost of material applies
-FOB on site, mean delivery cost is included in quoted price
-FOB factory, means you pick it up
Work breakdown structure: a hierarchal structure used to organize tasks for repo
rting schedules and tracking costs.
-often masterformat as a basis
Gross on site includes wastage in the estimate
To bid or not to bid:
-Desire for project
-Familiarity with market
-size of project
-risk?
Accurate estimating is important, without this contractor cannot compete in a fi
eld, complete a project on time and on budget, and make a profit
Estimated costs:
quantity*unit cost
quantity/Productivity
quantity/productivity*hourly unit cost
Productivity: general efficiency of an individual/organization. Output per work
hour, ex ft/hr, m^3/hr
Corporate overheads: cost of running a business
calculate TCPI with new approved budge; ie EAC instead of BAC in the denominator
-TCPI = [BAC-BCWP] / [BAC - ACWP]
Comments:
-Best way to
-information
-information
-better ways
-gives them rights to select up to 75% of workers and transfer up to 40% of them
from 1 area to another
Manufacturing vs Construction
-Manufacturing is further ahead in advancing technologies and methods for handli
ng, tracking, and managing materials
-fabrication facilities improve efficiency by becoming more like manufactures th
an constructors
-most external factors can be controlled
-external factors drive efficiencies (weather, site condition, soil type)
-difficult to predict/forecast
-managing different skills/expertise
Material Management
-a system for planning and controlling all efforts necessary to ensure that the
correct quality and quantity of material are specified in a timely manner, obtai
ned at a reasonable cost, and available at the point of use when required
-Efficiency system leads to improved productivity
-poor quality in MM process becomes apparent immediately at point of use
-Actually poor quality of engineering may not be apparent
Poor MM
-Problems occur in:
-quantity (not enough or too much)
-quality (wrong specs)
-material shortages disrupt work
-poor quality drives efficiencies
Planning: material planning includes quantifying, ordering, and scheduling. It i
s essential to increase productivity, profit, and completion in a timely manner
Procurement: The purchase of materials and services from outside organizations t
o support the firm's operations from production to marketing, sales and logistic
s
Logistics: emphasizes movement and includes planning, implementing, and controll
ing the flow and storage of all goods
Handling: The flow component that provides for their movement and placement
-Containerization and packaging
-Pallets, containers, protection, etc
-movement to site (truck, rail, water)
-May require special permits (ice road, wide load)
-Know when arriving at site
-off loading at site and storing (requires proper equipment)
-Horizontal movement
-conveyors, cranes, trucks, trailers
-Vertical movement
-crane, concrete pump, elevators
Inventory and waste control: A technique devised to cover and ensure all items a
re available when required.
-Setting standards for construction performance through pans and specifications,