11 Chapter 11: General Conditions and Project Staffing

Learning Objectives

After reading this chapter, you should be able to:

  • Define the elements contained within general conditions for a project.
  • Understand the typical organizational structure and job tasks of different participants on a project.
  • Be able to define and draw a typical organizational structure for a construction firm, and understand how it differs from typical manufacturing or service organizations.

 

Introduction

When developing a detailed estimate of costs, the team needs to plan for the project related general conditions costs. These costs do not directly contribute to the final facility, but they are necessary to manage the delivery of the project and ensure that the site is safe and secure. General Conditions will vary on a project-based upon the size of the project, project complexity, site constraints, duration of the project, cost of management staff, as well as many other factors.

General Conditions include the costs related to complying with the General Requirements for a project which are frequently outlined within a ‘General Requirements’ section of a contract. The minimum General Requirements are typically included in the Specification Section 01 within the Technical Specifications and may also be a separate contract document. To identify a cost for many of these items, an estimator can reference the CSI MasterFormat Section 01 within the Construction Cost Estimate with RS Means Data guide. Examples of items within the division include project management time, field supervision time, construction trailers, and jobsite fencing.

 

Construction Company Structure

There are many people engaged in the design and construction of a capital facility project.  When we look at the tasks that are typically performed by a construction organization, we see a number of core functions, with examples including estimating, scheduling, safety management, accounting, business development, and operations.  These functions can be organized in different ways within a construction company.  For smaller companies, a single person may perform multiple functions, e.g., estimating and accounting.  In larger companies, a function may be performed by a department within the organization, or possibly even multiple geographically located departments, e.g. an estimating department in Washington DC and an estimating department in New York.  

Preconstruction Services

 

 

Operations

Some companies refer to the staff members that are responsible for the planning and delivery of a facility as the ‘Operations’ function (or department) within the company.  The Operations group will typically have project executives, who manage the overall delivery of a project, along with project management staff who manage the delivery of the project on a day-to-day basis, and the superintendent staff who develop and implement the detailed construction plans, spending time in the field to direct the work activities.

Project Management Staff

The Project Management staff is responsible for managing the overall contract for the project.  These staff members are sometimes referred to as the ‘office staff’ from the perspective of the management of the project.  They tend to spend the majority of their time in an office environment, frequently in a jobsite trailer or office, working on management and administrative tasks necessary to ensure that the field labor and supervision are provided everything that they need to efficiently perform the fieldwork.  This includes tasks such as:

 

 

Field Supervision Staff

 

Review Questions

Type your exercises here.

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Introduction to the Building Industry Copyright © 2022 by John I. Messner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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