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8 Steps to a Successful Project

By Stephen Varone, AIA
President, RAND Engineering & Architecture, DPC

A RAND construction sign. Well-run construction projects have firm start and completion dates for each phase.

Boards and building owners undertaking capital improvement projects are naturally concerned about everything going right—and with good reason. Many projects, even those undertaken with a proper set of specifications and drawings from a professional engineering or architectural firm, are plagued with problems that can doom it to failure. The most prevalent reason? Insufficient coordination during construction.

Listed below are eight recommended steps that building owners and property managers should incorporate into every major project. The steps can make a vast difference in an owner's or manager's ability to anticipate and, thereby, minimize difficulties during construction.

1. Schedule a Project Initiation Conference

Gather all the responsible parties together at the onset of a project and you can avoid innumerable potential snags and misapprehensions. The conference should be attended by the managing agent and building superintendent, engineer/architect, an officer of the contracting firm, and one or more members of the board. At the conference, discuss all items of concern, such as scheduling, security, access requirements, and 24-hour emergency telephone numbers, and obtain insurance certificates, current licenses and other submittals from the contractor.

2. Carefully Review the Project Timeline

Many projects have well-established start and stop dates, yet they run into trouble because not enough thought has been put into the scheduling sequence and crew size required. A properly constructed timeline should have a start and completion date for every phase of the operation, allowing the engineer/architect to adjust components that may be overly optimistic or out of proper sequence.

3. Have a Full-time Project Superintendent

In most cases, the engineer/architect will visit the site once or twice a week to check on the status and quality of the work. If the project does not request full-time supervision by an engineer/architect (which can be costly), the contractor should provide a full-time supervisor, preferably in the form of a project superintendent on most projects. The supervisor may be a working foreman, as long as he is well versed in all of the project's aspects and requirements, can speak on behalf of the contractor, and is in full charge of all workers at the site. Most quality contractors will not resist this request and will include the cost in their quote.

4. Require Daily Reports

Keep the engineer/architect current on site developments, without the extraordinary cost of full-time supervision, by requiring the project superintendent to phone the engineer/architect at least once a day to report on that day's activities and work planned for the following day. Daily reports minimize miscommunication and scheduling snafus and reduce the potential for "wasted visits" by the engineer/architect.

5. Request Written Reports from the Engineer/Architect

Written reports keep all parties well informed of progress via the engineer/architect's findings and recommendations. A good site visit report focuses on the quality of the work observed, provides instructions for correcting any defective or improper work, lists other issues to be addressed (such as paint color selections and scaffold relocations) and notes the date of the next scheduled visit. Reports should be distributed to the board representative, managing agent, and contractor.

6. Hold Periodic Job Meetings

Hold meetings at the site at least once every two weeks. All parties should attend to review the status of the project, discuss any changes to the scope or timeline, point out work items or instructions that appear to have been neglected, and resolve any other problems. It is important to hold these meetings on site so that conditions and disputed work items can be viewed first hand.

7. Include a Liquidated Damages Clause in the Contract

Contractors hate this one, but no one can deny its effectiveness. Let's assume the contractor is replacing both your roof and the roof of a neighboring building. Both contracts call for a 12-week completion, but only your contract calls for a liquidated damages assessment of $500 for each day the project extends beyond the deadline. Guess which schedule will be more closely monitored by the contractor? Construction projects mean disruptions. Residents and shareholders may grudgingly accept a 12-week construction imposition but they will not easily–or quietly–accept one that unnecessarily becomes 24.

8. Insist on at Least 10 Percent Retainage

The best defense against being saddled with unfinished punch-list items is to insist that a retainage of at least 10 percent of the contract amount be held back until at least 30 days after the engineer/architect has signed off the completed project. The 30-day period is important because it allows you time to investigate whether any new punch-list items develop. The 10 percent minimum figure is important because it is substantial enough to keep the contractor motivated and can comfortably cover the costs of having punch-list items completed by another firm if the contractor neglects or is unable to finish the work.

While these eight steps are by no means the only essential elements of a well-run construction project, incorporating them will substantially increase the likelihood of successful results.

  • RAND Engineering & Architecture, DPC
  • 159 West 25th Street
  • New York, NY 10001
  • P: 212-675-8844
RAND Engineering & Architecture, DPC
159 West 25th Street | New York, NY 10001
P: 212-675-8844 |