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Construction Planning and Scheduling Construction Management Training Program For Technical Departments by AIT Extension & PRMP, Government Of Punjab Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. Assistant Professor & Director Construction Engineering & Management Program King Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonburi AIT Conference Center 18th August 2009

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Construction Planning and Scheduling Construction Management Training Program For Technical Departments by AIT Extension & PRMP, Government Of Punjab. Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor & Director Construction Engineering & Management Program - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Construction Planning and SchedulingConstruction Management Training Program For Technical Departments by AIT Extension & PRMP, Government Of Punjab

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D.Assistant Professor & Director

Construction Engineering & Management ProgramKing Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonburi

AIT Conference Center18th August 2009

Page 2: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Planning and Scheduling

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 3: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Three basic objectives of construction project management

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

3

Cost

Time Performance

Page 4: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

What is “Planning” ?

• General: “the function of selecting organization’s

objectives and establishing the policies,

procedures, and programs necessary for achieving

them.

• Project management context: “establishing an

predetermined course of action within a forecasted

environment”

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 5: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Planning & Control / Time & Cost

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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SchedulingCost

Planning

Schedule Control

Cost Control

Time Cost

Planning

Control

Page 6: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Planning & Control / Time & Cost Tools

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Bar Chart/CPM

Estimation/Cost

Planning

Bar Chart/CPM/

S-CurveEarned Value

Time Cost

Planning

Control

Page 7: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

What is “Scheduling”• “the function of arranging and sequencing the

planned activities in order to achieving the objectives”

• Questions to be answered:

1. What is the total duration of the project?

2. What are the start and finish dates for the activities?

3. Can a project activity be delayed? How long?

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 8: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Real life example• It’s now 8.30 am.

• You want to know the earliest time you can finish personal task for the lecture today:▫ Take a bath (5 min)

▫ Dress up (5 min)

▫ Boil water for tea (10 min)

▫ Food reheat (5 min)

▫ Eat breakfast (10 min)

▫ Having tea (5 min)

▫ Walk to lecture room (5 min)

• Can you be on time for the class? If not, what should I do?

• What is the earliest time you could reach the class?

• How much free time do you have before the class?

• Can I have any break after each task?

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 9: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Planning Process

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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DESCRIP

OFWORK

OBJECTIVES

PROJECTORGANIZATIO

N

“WHO DOES WHAT”WORK

PACKAGEDESCRIPTION

WORKBREAKDOWNSTRUCTURE

WORKSCHEDULE

PROJECTOBJECTIVE

S

SCOPE OF WORK

WORK PLAN

SCHEDULE

MANPOWER

BUDGET

“WHAT”

“WHO”

1 2

34

6

7

5

“HOW MUCH”PROJECT

BASE PLAN

“WHEN”

“HOW”

LOGICALSEQUENCE

AND RESOURCE

REQUIREMENTS

Source: lecture note Dr. Chotchai Charoenngam,  CE70.21 Integrated Project Planning and Control School of Engineering and Technology, AIT - 2008

Page 10: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Typical Scheduling techniques

1. Bar Chart

2. Network Diagram

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Page 11: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Categorizing scheduling techniques

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Page 12: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Bar Chart

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Page 13: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Barchart• Henry L. Gantt, World War I -1917

• Classic technique & Well known

Pro:

▫ Easy, Very effective communication tool

▫ Very popular for representation of simpler schedules

▫ Understandable to all level of management

Con:

▫ Can be complex when have >100 activities

▫ Key shortcoming: No dependencies captured

▫ Most effective as reporting format rather than representation

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 14: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Bar Chart – construction phase

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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dec

jan

feb

mar

ap

ril

may

jun

e

july

Foundation

Structural

Architectural

M & E

Landscape

TIME

ACTIVITIES

Page 15: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Bar Chart – whole development

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Page 16: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Hierarchy of Bar Charts

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Page 17: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Network Diagram

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Page 18: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Network Diagram• Shows not only timing but also interrelations and

dependencies of the activities

• Logical sequence behind the activities are important

• Two main types of network diagram

1. CPM (Critical Path Method)

2. PERT (Program Evaluation Review Technique)Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

18

A B C

D

EActivity 1 Activity 2 Activity 3

Activity 4 Activity 5

Page 19: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

CPM• Standard scheduling technique in construction

industry

• Logical sequence is the key

• Embedded in all commercial scheduling software (MS Project, Primavera Project Planner, etc)

• Very effective for control purpose

• Specified in the contract of almost all medium to large scale projects as a rule especially for the processes of change order and dispute resolution

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Page 20: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Two ways of representing CPM1. Arrow diagramming

2. Precedence diagramming

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1 2 3 4 5 6Mobilizing

Laying outfootings

Excavatingfootings

Formwork &Concrete

Erecting steel

Formwork procurement

Steel procurement

MobilizingLaying out

footingsExcavating

footingsFormwork & concrete

Erecting steel

Steelprocurement

Formworkprocurement

Page 21: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Steps in CPM scheduling

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Identifying activities

Assigning logical interrelationships between activities

Assigning duration for activities

Calculation

Page 22: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

1. Identifying activities•Breaking down project’s work into smaller

elements•Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)

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Page 23: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Templates

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Page 24: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Example 1

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WBS of house construction

Page 25: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Example 2

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WBS of large scale building construction

Page 26: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Numbering

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Page 27: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

How many level ?•Until the manageable level

•Until there is no important constraints between sub-activities

•For small to medium construction work, 4-5 levels would be appropriate

•For large-scale project, multiple-linked WBS are used. (Master WBS, GC WBS, SC WBS, etc.) Each is done by different party.

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Page 28: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

2. Logical interrelationships•Time-sequence relationships among the

various activities▫Mandatory – technical constraint

Foundation before structure Excavation before backfilling

▫Discretionary – management constraint Resource limitation Organization policy/procedure

▫External – external constraint Seasonal condition Law and regulations

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Page 29: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Example

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1 2

4

5 6

3

AB

C

D

EF

A

C

B D

E

F

Arrow diagram

Precedence diagram

dummy arrow

Page 30: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

QuizActivity

Excavation

Foundation

Basement

Structure

Wall

Rafter

Flooring

Rough interior

Roof

Finishing

Landscape

Cleaning upSanti Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Predecessor-

Excavation

Foundation

Foundation, Basement

Structure

Structure , Wall

Structure

Flooring

Rafter

Rough interior, Roof

Basement, Wall

Landscape, Finishing

Page 31: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Answer

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Excav Found

Base

Struc Floor

Wall

Rafter

Landscape

Rough

Roof

Finishing

Clean

Page 32: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Arrow vs Precedence diagramming

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Page 33: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Arrow vs Precedence diagramming

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Page 34: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

3. Duration•Amount of time assigned to complete a

particular activity•How to determine?

▫Historical information▫Information from subcontractor▫Handbook

•Duration = Work Quantity

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Crew production rate

Page 35: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

4. Calculation

• Forward & Backward calculation• The questions:

1. What is the total duration of the project?2. What are the start and finish dates for

the activities?3. Can a project activity be delayed? How

long?

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Page 36: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Notations

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Duration Total floati j

Early start Early finish

Late start Late finish

Activity description

Activity DescriptionActivity Description

Earlystart

Earlyfinish

Latestart

Latefinish

Duration

Totalfloat

Page 37: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Forward pass

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

A

BSanti Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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3 TF1 2

0 3

LS LF

A

AA

0 3

LS LF

3

TF

BB

3 7

LS LF

4

TF

4 TF37

LF

B

ES EF

ES EF

EF = ES + D

3

LS

Page 38: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Backward pass

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

A

B

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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3 TF1 2

0 3

1 3

A

AA

0 3

0 3

3

0

BB

3 7

3 7

4

0

4 TF37

7

B

ES EF

ES EF

LS = LF - D

LF is assigned or obtained

TF = LF – D – ES

3

3

Page 39: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

What is “Float”•Float or slack of activity is a measure of

flexibility, or inherent surplus time in the activity’s scheduling

•It indicates how long the activity can be delayed or extended without having effect on completion of the whole (or part) project

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 40: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Example analysisActivity Duration Preceding activity

A 2 -

B 2 A

C 4 B

D 1 A

E 2 D

F 2 C,E

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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AA0 2

0 2

2

0

BB2 4

2 4

2

0CC

4 8

4 8

4

0

DD2 3

5 6

1

3EE

3 5

6 8

2

3

FF8 10

8 10

2

0

CRITICAL PATH

Page 41: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

What the “critical path” can tell?•The path is critical !

•No delay is allowed in the path

•Management must take special care on all activities along the critical path

•Acceleration of the critical activities can shorten total project duration

•Who cause delay !

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 42: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

QuizActivity Predecessor Duration

Excavation - 2

Foundation Excavation 4

Basement Foundation 4

Structure Foundation, Basement 8

Wall Structure 4

Rafter Structure , Wall 2

Flooring Structure 3

Rough interior Flooring 3

Roof Rafter 2

Finishing Rough interior, Roof 4

Landscape Basement, Wall 8

Cleaning up Landscape, Finishing 2

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 43: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Logical relationships• Four logical relationships:

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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AAES EF

LS LF

D

BBES EF

LS LF

D

AAES EF

LS LF

D

BBES EF

LS LF

D

AAES EF

LS LF

D

BBES EF

LS LF

D

AAES EF

LS LF

D

BBES EF

LS LF

D

1. Finish-to-Start (FS) 2. Start-to-Start (SS)

3. Finish-to-Finish (FF) 4. Start-to-Finish (SF)

Can start B only when A finished Can start B only when A started

Can finish B only when A finished Can finish B only when A started

Page 44: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Lag•Waiting duration before beginning of the

subsequent action

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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AAES EF

LS LF

D

BBES EF

LS LF

D7

AAES EF

LS LF

D

BBES EF

LS LF

D

5

AAES EF

LS LF

D

BBES EF

LS LF

D

2

AAES EF

LS LF

D

BBES EF

LS LF

D

3

Page 45: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Use of SF SS FF and Lag

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Excavation

Concrete

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Excav 1Excav 12

Excav 2Excav 24

Conc 1Conc 14

Conc 2Conc 22

Excav Excav 6

ConcConc6

2

2

Excavation takes 6 days Concrete takes 6 days Concrete can be started after

excavation is already started for 2 days Concrete can be finished after

excavation is already finished for 2 days

Page 46: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Calculation of PDM

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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AAES EF

LS LF

0

BBES EF

LS LF

3

CCES EF

LS LF

4

DDES EF

LS LF

2

EEES EF

LS LF

2

FFES EF

LS LF

4

GGES EF

LS LF

6

HHES EF

LS LF

6

IIES EF

LS LF

3

JJES EF

LS LF

2

KKES EF

LS LF

0

1

3

2

1

Page 47: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Calculation of PDM

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

47

AA

0

BB3

CC 4

DD2

EE 2

FF4

GG6

HH

6

II3

JJ2

KK0

1

3

2

1

Page 48: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Calculation of PDM

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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AA0 0

0 0

0

BB0 3

0 3

3

CC0 4

1 5

4

DD4 6

4 6

2

EE 4 9

7 9

2

FF 4 8

5 9

4

GG6 12

8 14

6

HH 9 15

9 15

6

II12 15

14 17

3

JJ15 17

15 17

2

KK17 17

17 17

0

1

3

2

1

Page 49: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Quiz

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Page 50: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Float

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Page 51: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Float•Measure of flexibility , inherent surplus

time

•Activity’s allowable delay or extended time without causing delay to whole project

•Terminology :

1) Total float

2) Free float

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Page 52: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Definition•Total Float Amount of time that activity can be

delayed without affecting completion of the whole project

•Free Float Amount of time that activity can be

delayed without delaying the early start of following activity

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 53: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Total Float•Total Float (TF) = LF-D-ES

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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2 53

8E

6 3

4 84

8C

4 0

1 32

6D

5 3

2 42

4B

2 0

2 20

2A

0 0

2 108

10F

8 0

2 4 6 8 10

AB

DC

EF

1 3 5 7 9

Total Float is share by all activities in the path

Page 54: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Free Float

activitycurrent

activityfollowig EF - ES

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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• Free Float (FF) =

Free float is not shared

AA0 0

0 0

0

BB0 3

0 3

3

CC0 4

1 5

4

DD4 6

4 6

2

EE 4 9

7 9

2

FF 4 8

5 9

4

GG6 12

8 14

6

HH 9 15

9 15

6

II12 15

14 17

3

JJ15 17

15 17

2

KK17 17

17 17

0

1

3

2

1

Page 55: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Who own float•Tension between owner and

contractorTension contractor

•Signifiant legal implications

•Problem:

▫Owners seek to push contractors on tight schedule Too many late starts risk overall project

duration

▫Contractors seek flexibility Flexibility has value

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Page 56: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Presentation of schedule

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Page 57: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Questions to ask

•Present to whom?

•Which format ?

•Level of detail?

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Page 58: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

CPM

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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Bar chart

Bar chart

CPM

Page 59: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Example

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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2 53

8E

6 3

4 84

8C

4 0

1 32

6D

5 3

2 42

4B

2 0

2 20

2A

0 0

2 108

10F

8 0

2 4 6 8 10

AB

DC

EF

1 3 5 7 9

Page 60: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Draw Relationship

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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2 4 6 8 10

A

B

D

C

E

F

1 3 5 7 9

Page 61: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Delay Claim and Schedule Analysis

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Page 62: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

What is “delay”?•Time during which some part of the project

has been extended or not performed due to an unanticipated circumstance

•What causes delay?

•Who involves delay?

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Page 63: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Classification of delay

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Page 64: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Excusable and Non-excusable delays•“Excusable delay” is the one that justified

an extension of the project duration

•Examples of excusable delay?

•“Non-excusable delay” ⇒ extension is not permitted

•How can we know whether the delay is excusable or not? ⇒ “ Contract”

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Page 65: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Examples

• In general conditions of contract:“8.3 Delays and Extensions of Time

8.3.1 If the Contractor is delayed at any time in the progress of the

work by an act or neglect of the Owner or Architect, or of an

employee of either, or of a separate contractor employed by the

Owner, or by changes ordered in the work, or by labor disputes, fire,

unusual delay in deliveries, unavoidable casualties or other causes

beyond the Contractor’s control, or by delay authorized by the

Owner pending arbitration, or by any other causes which the Architect

determines may justify delay, then the Contract Time shall be extended

by Change Order for such reasonable time as the Architect may

determine”

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Source: American Institute of Architect Document A201

Page 66: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

“Compensable” and “Non-compensable” delays•Excusable delay

1. Compensable

2. Non-compensable

• If compensable, contractor is entitled to additional compensation (normally money)

• In some cases, compensation without extension of time

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Page 67: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Critical & Non-critical delay•Not all delays result in delay to the whole

project completion

•Critical delay is delay occurred in critical activity, hence it delays the whole project completion

•Excusable but non-critical delay does not justify extension of project duration

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Page 68: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Consequences of excusable delays

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Critical Non-critical

Compensable

Non-compensable

Additional payment and

time extension

Additional payment, but

no time extension

Time extension, but no additional

payment

No time extension, and no

additional payment

Page 69: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

How to classify?•Excusable vs Non-excusable

•Critical vs Non-critical

•Compensable vs Non-compensable

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“Contract”

“Schedule analysis”

“Evidence”

Page 70: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Scheduling and delay analysis• Schedules play a very important role in

construction delay claims

• Delay can be identified, defined, and explained by schedules

• Delay of an activity may or may not become delay of the whole project

• Without schedule, difficult to recognize delay

• Objective is to prove Critical or Non-critical delay

• Only delay on critical activity is considered

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Page 71: Santi Ch aroenpornpattana , Ph.D. Assistant Professor &  Director

Conlucsion•Concept of scheduling•Bar chart•CPM

▫Arrow diagram, PDM▫CPM analysis▫Interpretation

•Float•Presentation of Schedule

Santi Charoenpornpattana, Ph.D. @2009

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