Risk Pricing in Construction Tenders - How, Who, What
Construction projects are most commonlyprocured in Australia by means of a traditionaldesign–tender–build model, whereby design islargely completed then contractors submittenders in a competitive environment.Construction contractors must consider riskswithin their tenders. This paper reports therese...
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doaj-9586a053ccd6427a84306f17510c6be52020-11-24T22:24:25ZengUTS ePRESSAustralasian Journal of Construction Economics and Building1835-63541837-91332012-11-0181496010.5130/ajceb.v8i1.29971962Risk Pricing in Construction Tenders - How, Who, WhatMarcus Tower0David Baccarini1Curtin University of TechnologyCurtin University of TechnologyConstruction projects are most commonlyprocured in Australia by means of a traditionaldesign–tender–build model, whereby design islargely completed then contractors submittenders in a competitive environment.Construction contractors must consider riskswithin their tenders. This paper reports theresearch findings into pricing for risk incompetitive tenders by constructioncontractors. The research is based onstructured interviews with 10 contractingpersonnel; supplemented by 23 responses ofconstruction personnel from an online survey.Two common methods to price for risk are atrade-by-trade basis or an overall percentageor lump sum addition to the base estimate.Experience and intuition plays a significant rolein pricing for risk in tenders and the numberand type of people involved varies with projectsize, with greater involvement as project sizeincreases. The most significant risks priced intenders were: availability of resources; designor documentation errors; incomplete design;buildability issues; and inclement weather. Themost significant project factors considered bycontractors when pricing for risk in tenders are:value of liquidated damages; type ofcontract/procurement; completeness ofdocumentation; project complexity; and currentworkload. These risks and project factors areprimarily those over which the contractor haslimited or no control.https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/2997 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Marcus Tower David Baccarini |
spellingShingle |
Marcus Tower David Baccarini Risk Pricing in Construction Tenders - How, Who, What Australasian Journal of Construction Economics and Building |
author_facet |
Marcus Tower David Baccarini |
author_sort |
Marcus Tower |
title |
Risk Pricing in Construction Tenders - How, Who, What |
title_short |
Risk Pricing in Construction Tenders - How, Who, What |
title_full |
Risk Pricing in Construction Tenders - How, Who, What |
title_fullStr |
Risk Pricing in Construction Tenders - How, Who, What |
title_full_unstemmed |
Risk Pricing in Construction Tenders - How, Who, What |
title_sort |
risk pricing in construction tenders - how, who, what |
publisher |
UTS ePRESS |
series |
Australasian Journal of Construction Economics and Building |
issn |
1835-6354 1837-9133 |
publishDate |
2012-11-01 |
description |
Construction projects are most commonlyprocured in Australia by means of a traditionaldesign–tender–build model, whereby design islargely completed then contractors submittenders in a competitive environment.Construction contractors must consider riskswithin their tenders. This paper reports theresearch findings into pricing for risk incompetitive tenders by constructioncontractors. The research is based onstructured interviews with 10 contractingpersonnel; supplemented by 23 responses ofconstruction personnel from an online survey.Two common methods to price for risk are atrade-by-trade basis or an overall percentageor lump sum addition to the base estimate.Experience and intuition plays a significant rolein pricing for risk in tenders and the numberand type of people involved varies with projectsize, with greater involvement as project sizeincreases. The most significant risks priced intenders were: availability of resources; designor documentation errors; incomplete design;buildability issues; and inclement weather. Themost significant project factors considered bycontractors when pricing for risk in tenders are:value of liquidated damages; type ofcontract/procurement; completeness ofdocumentation; project complexity; and currentworkload. These risks and project factors areprimarily those over which the contractor haslimited or no control. |
url |
https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/AJCEB/article/view/2997 |
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