Cost Comparison of Collaborative and IPD-Like Project Delivery Methods Versus Competetive Non-collaborative Project Delivery Methods

Aditi Kulkarni1, Zofia K. Rybkowski2 & James Smith3

1Graduate Student, Department of Construction Science, School of Architecture, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA, Phone +1 (979) 571-5846, [email protected]
2Assistant Professor, Department of Construction Science, School of Architecture, Fellow, Center for Health Systems and Design, 434 Langford A, 3137, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA, Phone +1 (979) 845-4354, [email protected]
3PhD Student, Department of Construction Science, School of Architecture, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA, Phone +1 (801) 885-0422, [email protected]

Abstract

PURPOSE: Collaborative project delivery methods are believed to contribute to faster completion times, lower overall project costs and higher quality. Contracts are expected to influence the degree of collaboration on a given project since they allow or restrict certain lines of communication in the decision-making process. Various delivery systems rank differently on the spectrum of collaboration. The purpose of this study is to test if collaborative project delivery methods impart value. Ideally the most extreme forms of project delivery methods, that is, Integrated Project Delivery (IPD) and Design-Bid-Build (DBB), should be compared to test the effects of collaboration on benefits to the owner. Due to difficulty in obtaining data on IPD and similarly scaled DBB projects, for this study, their close cousins, CM-at-Risk (CMR) and Competitive Sealed Proposal (CSP) were compared. METHODOLOGY: The study compared cost performance and reducible change orders of 17 CMR and 13 CSP projects by the same owner. FINDINGS: The overall cost performance is more reliable for CMR than for CSP projects. The cost of reducible change orders for all three categories (errors, omissions and design modifications) are lower for CMR than for CSP projects IMPLICATIONS: This study is expected to help boost confidence in the benefits of collaborative project delivery methods. It is also likely that the results will encourage acceptance of IPD for public projects.

Keywords

Collaboration, Project Delivery, CM-at-Risk (CMR; CMAR), Competitive Sealed Proposal (CSP), Integrated Project Delivery (IPD), Design-Bid-Build (DBB), Cost Comparison

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Reference

Kulkarni, A. , Rybkowski, Z. K. & Smith, J. 2012. Cost Comparison of Collaborative and IPD-Like Project Delivery Methods Versus Competetive Non-collaborative Project Delivery Methods, 20th Annual Conference of the International Group for Lean Construction , -. doi.org/

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