Here’s a sampling of
what Giant GCs and CMs are doing by way of technological and managerial
innovation.
“UAV.” “LATISTA.” “CMST.” If BD+C
Giants 300 contractors have anything to say about it, these new terms may
someday be as well known as “BIM” or “LEED.” Here’s a sampling of what Giant
GCs and CMs are doing by way of technological and managerial innovation.
Hoar Construction is using
UAVs—$1,200 unmanned aerial vehicles—to replace aerial photography and video on
job sites. C.W. Driver is using its new Quad-copter drone to record building
conditions and capture live video for inspection purposes. The firm is also
using Structure Scanner to take millions of measurements of field conditions
and compile the data into point-cloud files for modeling purposes.
In the BIM/VDC arena,
Bernards claims that its use of BIM and Lean construction principles has led to
a “dramatic reduction” in RFIs and change orders. HITT Contracting says it can
now provide virtual O+M services via BIM to help clients improve ongoing
building maintenance. Adolfson & Peterson Construction employs BIM on a
fourth of its projects, largely for above-ceiling coordination of MEP/FP
systems, but expects to deploy BIM more frequently in the future as projects
grow in size and complexity.
Off-the-shelf apps are
proving popular with GCs. Paric Corp. and PCL Construction have found
Autodesk’s BIM 360 Field useful in providing project content in the field via
iPads, laptops, and smartphones. (PCL also uses BIM 360 Glue.) PlanGrid, which
S. M. Wilson implemented this year, gives team members—including designers,
owners, and subcontractors—instanteous access to construction documents,
specifications, punch lists, photos, notes, and RFIs.
Messer Construction has been using LATISTA management software on 80% of its projects in the past year to perform field-based quality control in support of its Lean Daily Management program. LPCiminelli has set up its own customer enterprise system, BRICKS, to drive down costs.
Prefabrication is also
grabbing contractors’ attention. Walbridge built 125 complete bathroom units
off site for a renovation at the University of Michigan and is building another
750 bath units for a new residence hall at Michigan.
DPR Construction has
partnered with OES Supply Company on the development of a “temporary dust
containment system” that replaces temporary gypsum board walls. Ten linear feet
of the containment barrier can be installed in 10 minutes. Over a three-month
period, using 20 linear feet of the anti-dust barrier could save 50% over
drywall, says DPR.
Technical innovation is
evident at Columbia University’s massive $6.8 billion Manhattanville expansion
in West Harlem, where Lend Lease constructed a gigantic slurry wall around the
17-acre plot—“a huge geotechnical accomplishment,” according to Lend Lease. For
the Jerome L. Greene Science Center, the contractor is using “top-down”
construction, in which work proceeds in both vertical directions
simultaneously—a first for the Big Apple, says Lend Lease.
CONTRACTOR INVENTIVENESS NOT LIMITED TO TECH
Contractors are also making
headway with management innovations. Summit Contracting now limits its project
managers to a single job at a time so that they can devote their undivided
attention to that one owner’s project.
Materials delivered to
Hoffman Construction sites are used within three workdays; excess items are
immediately stored in wheeled, covered receptacles to keep work sites safe.
KBE Building Corp. has
implemented a disaster recovery system. All data stored in the firm’s main
server in Farmington, Conn., is automatically copied to a backup server in
Columbia, Md., reducing recovery time in the event of a disaster to two hours,
rather than three days.
Firms are widening their horizons,
too. DLR Group has created a Building Optimization Group to provide
commissioning, retro Cx, energy modeling, and building analysis services.
Shawmut Design and Construction reached out to recent college graduates with
its Construction Management Skills Training (CMST) program, a three-year
rotation through the firm’s project management, estimating, and field
divisions—and got 2,000 applications for 30 positions.
Market perspective: Hill International’s David Richter
“We’re still climbing out of the
recession, although the industry’s certainly in a growth mode,” says David L.
Richter, President/COO of Hill International, Marlton, N.J. Richter’s father,
Irvin, founded the company in 1976 to provide claims consulting, which still
constitutes 25% of revenues. Hill, which went public in 2006 (NYSE: HIL), has
grown into one of the biggest project management firms in the world, with 4,200
employees in more than 100 offices managing more than 1,000 projects.
Eighty percent of its
business is outside the U.S.—half of that in fast-paced non-buildings sectors
like transportation and energy—putting the construction management firm on a
steeply upward path, says Richter, a BD+C “40 Under 40” superstar (Class
of 2006). He will step up to the CEO role in January; his father will stay on
as Chairman.
In recent years, the Richters
have moved the business in the direction of program management—clients who have
multiple massive projects going on at any one time. “Developers in places like
the Middle East rarely put up one building,” says Richter. “It’s four, five,
six or more at a time, and you can really drive down costs when you have that
kind of scale.”
The company is currently
managing 40 programs in the billion-dollar range. Current projects include new
airport terminals in Abu Dhabi ($2.93 billion), Bahrain ($950 million), and
Muscat, Oman ($5.2 billion).
In the U.S., most of Hill’s
vertical portfolio is on the East Coast, primarily in higher education and
healthcare. Last December, the firm acquired 20-person Collaborative Partners,
a Boston firm with strong ties to the New England K-12, healthcare, and
biosciences sectors. “That deal has already started to pay off for us, with
work at UMass Boston and Northeastern University’s Interdisciplinary Science
and Engineering Complex,” says Richter.
Source: BDC
Network
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