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Risk Assignment in The Delivery of a Project  RISK! –Construction projects have lot of it –Contractors manage it –Owners pay for it.

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Presentation on theme: "Risk Assignment in The Delivery of a Project  RISK! –Construction projects have lot of it –Contractors manage it –Owners pay for it."— Presentation transcript:

1 Risk Assignment in The Delivery of a Project  RISK! –Construction projects have lot of it –Contractors manage it –Owners pay for it

2 FACT:  Today’s owner is placing more demands on designer & constructor to get job done….  ON TIME  ON BUDGET  WITHOUT UNANTICIPATED CHANGES  FAILURE TO SATISFY ANY OF THE ABOVE IS CONSIDERED “RISK” AND CAN OFTEN CAUSE FINANCIAL PENALTY AND/OR LIQUIDATED DAMAGES

3 FACT:  Traditionally, owners seek to minimize their risk through the contract:  They like to allocate the majority of the risk to others, depending on the contract type: –Construction Manager –Prime Contractor –Multiple Primes, etc

4 RESULT –project participants develop strategies to minimize their own financial risk –inflate job costs to “cover” potential loss –seeking reimbursement for insurance costs associated with excessive or owner- imposed risks FINAL EFFECT: HIGHER ULTIMATE JOB COST TO OWNER

5 Risk  Risk is inherent to the construction process  If risk is managed through “assignment” to the team member most able to manage it….. –Owner –Designer –Contractor ………………then risk can be shared in a manner that results in reduction of the job cost.

6 Why Owners Should be Concerned with Risk Allocation  If unexpected risk is experienced that causes financial loss: –Adversarial relationships develop –Time/energy/money is wasted on disputes and claims –Focus of the “team” is lost to get the job done right, on time & on budget

7 Origin of Risk  Many risks are common to all projects:  Time delays  Overruns: –The amount by which actual costs exceed estimates  Unexpected changes  Other risks are very specific to type of construction and/or location of the project

8 Examples of Risk  Who is responsible for the acquisition of easements?  What happens if there’s an archaeological discovery?  What if environmental hazardous waste is encountered?  Subsurface conditions may vary from those expected.  Late or unsuitable owner furnished materials may cause a time delay.

9 Risk Allocation  The process of identifying project risks is: –Determining how risks may be equitably shared by all parties  Develop dispute avoidance techniques  The result is: “more project for the money”

10 Benefits to The Owner  Costly disputes are minimized  Avoids: – unexpected delays & added job costs WHY?  Contractors are able to avoid addition of “contingencies” in the bid –“contingency” money is “fluff money” added for the WHAT IF situation.  Contractors are not saddled with having to recognize, anticipate and “cost” risk which may be unfairly allocated to them  If risk issues are dealt with in advance, owner will realize a price advantage.

11 Benefits to the Contractor  When uncertainties are minimized and specific risk is allocated: –Contractor can submit more competitive bids –Lower contingencies –Disputes & litigation avoided

12 Benefits To The Project  Shortened project delivery  Minimal resources allocated to conflict resolution  Owner, designer & contractor realize a partnership relationship

13 What is The Owner’s Role In Allocating Risk? Willingness: –to share project risk –to be realistic in terms & conditions –to become educated regarding potential problems with the project –to make educated risk allocation decisions & approve necessary contract procedures

14 Basic Principles of Risk Allocation  Identify risk as specifically and early as possible  Risk Sharing: –Contractually place risk upon parties according the their ability to: 1. Minimize it 2. Handle the potential risk if it occurs

15 Example  Sharing risk due to unusually severe weather: –Typical boilerplate AIA contract clause grants contractor the right to a time extension, but does not provide additional compensation for the costs incurred as a result. –THIS IS A FINANCIAL RISK ASSUMED BY THE CONTRACTOR DUE TO LOSS OF WORK TIME –HOWEVER, the Owner assumes risk of delay in progress/completion (no liquidated damages or penalty may be assessed) This is an example of risk sharing

16 What Owners are Doing To Better Allocate Risk & Reduce Project Costs  Thorough front-end document review: –Include a dispute resolution system in the General Conditions or Supplementary Conditions –Use of AIA or EJCDC documents which do the above

17 What Owners are Doing To Better Allocate Risk & Reduce Project Costs  Owner’s SHOULD invest in subsurface investigation  Boring logs should be available to contractors during bidding process –results in more competitive bid **Some owners think this may lead to claims if the logs don’t accurately identify all encountered conditions. BUT: IT IS APPROPRIATE THAT THE OWNER PAY FOR THESE CHANGED CONDITIONS IF ENCOUNTERED!

18 What Owners are Doing To Better Allocate Risk & Reduce Project Costs  Quality Design –Comprehensive and complete design effort  Multidisciplinary Constructability Review: –Owner (functionality) –Contractor (builder’s perspective) –Design Professional (quality of design)

19 What Owners are Doing To Better Allocate Risk & Reduce Project Costs  Adequate funding of: a.Pre-design surveys b.Investigation of rite-of-way & easement issues c.Investigation if site access issues THESE “SOFT ENGINEERING” ISSUES MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN PREPARATION OF ADEQUATE, RESPONSIBLE AND COMPLETE BID PRICING

20 The Importance of the Contract  Focal point should be risk allocation: –Importance cannot be over-emphasized  Ideally, the contract will: –Clearly identify risks and responsibilities associated with the project –Assign risks to party best equipped to manage them

21 In The End  The Contract will: –Serve as framework of the legal agreement between the parties –Establish which party has assumed what risk –Be significant in defining the duties of each party


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