Interstates
  Taking the Bus  
     
 
Project Delivery
 

Capital Projects
Energy & Operating Cost Savings
Flexibility
Project Delivery
Safety

Working with Your Utility

Value Engineering

Prove it

Resources Home

 

Project Delivery
Back to Project Delivery Resources

Detailed Coordination Efforts
Dave Crumrine, P.E., PMP; Dave Los; Lowell Dykstra; and Jeremy Oliver
October 2005, Design-Build DATELINE

How would you like to accelerate your project? How about reducing the risks of those troublesome field conflicts and the related costs? Maybe even getting everyone on the same page in those tight areas everyone knows about but nobody really wants to talk about?

Design-build provides fertile ground for this important effort. Doing it well can help our clients get better projects, more innovative projects, faster projects, and, by improving productivity, more cost effective projects.

You say “sure, but can I afford it?” “Can this really work?” The answer is, yes it can. And at a fraction of the overall costs required to correct such conflicts after the fact in the traditional way.

It just happens that with design-build project delivery, unlike traditional project delivery, the benefits of eliminating or reducing these costs go to the same party.

One problem with traditional project delivery is that it punishes quality preplanning. Engineering fees are low and usually fixed. The more detailed the drawings, the more coordination, the more questions, the more effort (and hours). It’s a geometric curve in the wrong direction. And why? There is no tangible benefit for the engineer/designer—just headaches and rising costs and, ultimately, less profits.

Design-Build
In comes design-build—a project delivery system that rewards extra planning and collaboration. The goals of the builder and the designer are aligned within a time frame that makes it all possible. Planning pays off later in fewer field hours through improved productivity (read carefully, the big $$$).

The designer can benefit from helping the constructor. The constructor has a partner who is willing and able to put extra effort into the design and coordination and guess what? Nobody cares about his Brooks Act fee limit (typically six percent for design work). Detailed coordination drawings have never been technically impossible to complete. However, they have been unlikely because of the conventional way projects have been designed and constructed.

The traditional system has not allowed for compensating the designer to do coordination early nor has it allowed the time for it to be done well by the constructor later in the project cycle. Additionally, contractors under traditional project delivery have found it difficult to get adequately compensation for conflicts.

A recent study on MEP coordination in the ASCE Journal of Construction Engineering and Management(August 2005) indicates that contractors don’t recover 80 percent of costs of field interferences and that those costs grow geometrically the later in the building process they are discovered.

DBIA’s own document #309 Selecting Specialty Contractors lists multiple quantitative benefits to doing early specialty contractor selection and collaboration. A clear differentiator between average projects and excellent projects is early involvement by key specialty contractors.

This article promotes the use of detailed coordination drawings in 3DCAD as a high-leverage tool to drive improved coordination among engineers, constructors, owners, and subcontractors. This coordination, done well and early, enables innovation by allowing more prefabrication, standardization, and process improvement in project construction. It’s an opportunity that the AEC industry desperately needs.

Background
With projects accelerating and clients needing projects faster and faster with no time cushion, more extensive planning and coordination makes more sense than ever. Some of the improvement yields lower costs, but the benefits don’t stop there. Better coordination can improve a project’s quality, the team’s delivery speed and their cooperation. When everyone is working off the same well thought out playbook, things go better.

Our firm has just begun to use 3DCAD. For many years, 2D CAD was enough and met the standards our clients expected. As an electrical design-builder, our needs were simple and intended to meet the industry status quo. We weren’t a large multi-national and, frankly, the investment in training and software for the anticipated payback just wasn’t there for 3D. Generally we required only basic layout drawings showing our work schematically.

Then came our need to prefabricate. The industrial market was pushing us competitively and with challenging jobs. Prefabrication allowed us more optimization and the ability to do more work with less field resources. This drove the need to bridge the ideas that our planning teams were developing into our prefabrication facility. By utilizing 3DCAD we were able to do more, and better, prefabrication. Additionally, our people were able to better visualize what was going to happen and they became more effective in the field putting it in.

As an industrial electrical contractor, the early challenges were some complex conduit racks that had to be “right” when they arrived on the site. Project schedules simply would not allow a great deal of rework. We looked to 3D CAD and experimented. It worked nicely. There was a learning curve, but the benefits were obvious. We soon noticed our field managers wanted to look at the models and improve them once they could see the arrangement and get different views of the model.

Suddenly it was OK to try some things before it was built. The first solution that worked didn’t have to be the solution we used. We were able to look at multiple solutions and pick the best one. We could now optimize a layout rather than just use the first one that worked.

As our prefab volume increased, we realized that the need to get the prefab designed and into the shop forced earlier planning and required earlier information. Teams weren’t waiting for the drawings to be delivered to them. They were part of creating the plan.

Serious constructability dialog was occurring, and occurring in an efficient manner during the design process, not after round one design was over. When you think about it, it makes perfect sense. Trade a significant number of skilled labor field hours for some designer hours collaborating with field leaders and wow … big improvements in project delivery.

In our case the next step came early. We were involved in a shutdown project to upgrade part of a steel rolling line. The client was under substantial time and economic pressure as the existing line was successful but the improvement would help them do much more. They could not afford for the line to be down as long as previous projects had demanded.

The client’s business need was now driving the project goals. This was a chance to really help a customer at their business by using our engineering and construction skills to solve a real-life business challenge.

The client requested that the shutdown be reduced from 42 days to 21days. Some additional time would be available for planning and pull ahead work, but the schedule was now half of what we had ever attempted on similar efforts. At this decision point, some of our 3D design was already done. We were actively coordinating with other trades to verify our elevations and positioning. There were a significant number of other trades that would be involved in the project.

The project required the shoring and excavation of a 40 by 40 by 15 foot deep hole as well as the forming, reinforcing, and pouring of the foundations. Installing piping, electrical, and other services would follow closely, and then backfill and slab concrete would be done. A huge amount of “stuff” had to fit into this small hole and there would not be time to do things twice.

As the larger coordination effort began, the client and Interstates recognized the potential for using the existing 3D electrical model for coordination of other trades. The client agreed to provide some additional resources to ensure the modeling could continue under a wider scope.

As expected, not every trade endorsed this method, as it was new and had not been previously done on this client’s projects. The expected pressure and additional risk of the shortened shutdown provided the catalyst for the team to use the tool and spend time together doing quality coordination. No one wanted to be the trade that “messed it up” with poor coordination when the client was supporting the team approach.

As coordination progressed, several of the trades participated with 2Ddrawings overlaid on the electrical3D model. If a potential conflict needed more examination, that element could be added in the 3Dmodel. This way, resistance by the other trades was reduced while still allowing visualization by the whole team and good end results.

After a series of coordination efforts, manufacturing of the prefabricated components began. Rack components were manufactured and sent to the site in several large pieces. During the shutdown, about 2,000 feet of highly fabricated rigid conduit was installed in a matter of hours with a small crew. Only a fraction of the field man-hours planned for conventional installation was used.

In this particular shutdown, the electrical prefabrication went so well it allowed the project to overcome some early slippage and get back on track. The other trades followed suit and the shutdown went “better than any other shutdown” the client had ever done. Many of the trades saw that coordination was the source of this success. Their deeper understanding of coordination issues helped resolve other small problems that emerged during the shutdown.

Enablers
This challenging project ended as an unqualified success for the whole project delivery team. Why did this project go well when others that look nearly the same don’t? Here are a few key “enablers:”

  1. Planning time was available and well used (early effort is key).
  2. The client realized the value of detailed coordination and encouraged it with additional resources.
  3. When less time was available for the shutdown, the team revised the schedule to include more planning time, effort, and pull headwork.
  4. The team was open to doing things differently because team members understood the additional pressure and risk.
  5. The client was clear about his needs and objectives. He provided flexibility where he could (delaying the shutdown) and was clear where he needed additional performance (reduced shutdown time). He used the team that was going to do the construction work to help make the decisions.
  6. The client (acting as his own CM) set the tone that planning and coordination was needed and sponsored the 3D coordination effort.

Beyon the Example
Now that we have looked at an example of a detailed coordination effort making an impact, let us look a little deeper. Many of the opportunities for detailed coordination have always been available to our industry. But under design-build, the barriers to using these methods and tools are reduced, providing fertile ground for the opportunity to really impact projects. Let’s take a look at what is at stake.

Why do it? The Results and the Reasons Behind Them

Why is this a Larger Opportunity with Design-Build Than Other Project Delivery Methods?

What are the Barriers to Doing this Type of Detailed Coordination in Design-Build?

Detailed Coordination
How to do detailed coordination when you have the design-build opportunity (the critical steps):

Intensive coordination is a step up from the status quo in the AEC industry. It is a step our industry really must make and practitioners of design-build must leverage. Design-build provides fertile ground for this important effort. Doing it well can help our clients get better projects, more innovative projects, faster projects, and, by improving productivity, more cost effective projects. As a collaborative effort, it will allow specialty contractors more influence on their destiny and ultimately make our entire industry healthier.

How will you drive great specialty trade coordination on your next project?

For images, please view the .pdf version of this article.

Back to Project Delivery Resources