Achieving value in construction is now emerging as the main challenge facing the construction team if they are to offer the best service for the client. No longer is the aim simply to keep costs under control.
This book from the RICS Foundation analyses how to provide best value by the effective application of leading edge techniques and processes throughout the entire life cycle of buildings, from the business case which underpins their initiation to the achievement of a satisfactory project out-turn.
This book is a successor to Quantity Surveying Techniques: New Directions, edited by Peter Brandon and published on behalf of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors by Blackwell. It will be of interest not only to surveyors and construction managers but also to final year undergraduates of construction degrees.
'[This book] will make a major contribution to the advancement of the methods by which construction professionals provide a service to their clients' - Professor Peter Brandon
Editorial Reviews
Review
"So, this book from the RICS Foundation seeks to look at the entire life-cycle of buildings, from initial inception, right through to their use and development, and analyses how we can provide best value to the client through the effective application of leading-edge techniques and processes"
Stephen Brown, Director or Research, RICS Foundation
From the Inside Flap
Achieving value in construction is emerging as the main challenge facing the construction team. This multi-contributor book, which draws on expertise from both research and practice, focuses on value in project planning, project management in design and on site, and facilities management. In the process, it highlights key new areas of practice for surveyors and other construction practitioners.
From the Back Cover
Achieving value in construction is emerging as the main challenge facing the construction team. This multi-contributor book, which draws on expertise from both research and practice, focuses on value in project planning, project management in design and on site, and facilities management. In the process, it highlights key new areas of practice for surveyors and other construction practitioners.
About the Author
John Kelly is AWG Professor of Construction Innovation, School of the Built and Natural Environment, Glasgow Caledonian University.
Roy Morledge is Professor of Construction Procurement in the School of Architecture, Design and Built Environment at Nottingham Trent University.