Analysis of the State of Practice and Best Practices for Alternative Project Delivery Methods in the Transportation Design and Construction Industry

abstract: Alternative Project Delivery Methods (APDMs), namely Design Build (DB) and Construction Manager at Risk (CMAR), grew out of the need to find a more efficient project delivery approach than the traditional Design Bid Build (DBB) form of delivery. After decades of extensive APDM use, there h...

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Other Authors: Bingham, Evan Dale (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27405
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-274052018-06-22T03:05:39Z Analysis of the State of Practice and Best Practices for Alternative Project Delivery Methods in the Transportation Design and Construction Industry abstract: Alternative Project Delivery Methods (APDMs), namely Design Build (DB) and Construction Manager at Risk (CMAR), grew out of the need to find a more efficient project delivery approach than the traditional Design Bid Build (DBB) form of delivery. After decades of extensive APDM use, there have been many studies focused on the use of APDMs and project outcomes. Few of these studies have reached a level of statistical significance to make conclusive observations about APDMs. This research effort completes a comprehensive study for use in the horizontal transportation construction market, providing a better basis for decisions on project delivery method selection, improving understanding of best practices for APDM use, and reporting outcomes from the largest collection of APDM project data to date. The study is the result of an online survey of project owners and design teams from 17 states representing 83 projects nationally. Project data collected represents almost six billion US dollars. The study performs an analysis of the transportation APDM market and answers questions dealing with national APDM usage, motivators for APDM selection, the relation of APDM to pre-construction services, and the use of industry best practices. Top motivators for delivery method selection: the project schedule or the urgency of the project, the ability to predict and control cost, and finding the best method to allocate risk, as well as other factors were identified and analyzed. Analysis of project data was used to compare to commonly held assumptions about the project delivery methods, confirming some assumptions and refuting others. Project data showed that APDM projects had the lowest overall cost growth. DB projects had higher schedule growth. CMAR projects had low design schedule growth but high construction schedule growth. DBB showed very little schedule growth and the highest cost growth of the delivery methods studied. Best practices in project delivery were studied: team alignment, front end planning, and risk assessment were identified as practices most critical to project success. The study contributes and improves on existing research on APDM project selection and outcomes and fills many of the gaps in research identified by previous research efforts and industry leaders. Dissertation/Thesis Bingham, Evan Dale (Author) Gibson Jr., G. Edward (Advisor) El Asmar, Mounir (Advisor) Bearup, Wylie (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Civil engineering Management Alternative Project Delivery Best Practice Construction Manager at Risk Design Build Preconstruction Team Alignment eng 246 pages Doctoral Dissertation Civil Engineering 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27405 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Civil engineering
Management
Alternative Project Delivery
Best Practice
Construction Manager at Risk
Design Build
Preconstruction
Team Alignment
spellingShingle Civil engineering
Management
Alternative Project Delivery
Best Practice
Construction Manager at Risk
Design Build
Preconstruction
Team Alignment
Analysis of the State of Practice and Best Practices for Alternative Project Delivery Methods in the Transportation Design and Construction Industry
description abstract: Alternative Project Delivery Methods (APDMs), namely Design Build (DB) and Construction Manager at Risk (CMAR), grew out of the need to find a more efficient project delivery approach than the traditional Design Bid Build (DBB) form of delivery. After decades of extensive APDM use, there have been many studies focused on the use of APDMs and project outcomes. Few of these studies have reached a level of statistical significance to make conclusive observations about APDMs. This research effort completes a comprehensive study for use in the horizontal transportation construction market, providing a better basis for decisions on project delivery method selection, improving understanding of best practices for APDM use, and reporting outcomes from the largest collection of APDM project data to date. The study is the result of an online survey of project owners and design teams from 17 states representing 83 projects nationally. Project data collected represents almost six billion US dollars. The study performs an analysis of the transportation APDM market and answers questions dealing with national APDM usage, motivators for APDM selection, the relation of APDM to pre-construction services, and the use of industry best practices. Top motivators for delivery method selection: the project schedule or the urgency of the project, the ability to predict and control cost, and finding the best method to allocate risk, as well as other factors were identified and analyzed. Analysis of project data was used to compare to commonly held assumptions about the project delivery methods, confirming some assumptions and refuting others. Project data showed that APDM projects had the lowest overall cost growth. DB projects had higher schedule growth. CMAR projects had low design schedule growth but high construction schedule growth. DBB showed very little schedule growth and the highest cost growth of the delivery methods studied. Best practices in project delivery were studied: team alignment, front end planning, and risk assessment were identified as practices most critical to project success. The study contributes and improves on existing research on APDM project selection and outcomes and fills many of the gaps in research identified by previous research efforts and industry leaders. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Civil Engineering 2014
author2 Bingham, Evan Dale (Author)
author_facet Bingham, Evan Dale (Author)
title Analysis of the State of Practice and Best Practices for Alternative Project Delivery Methods in the Transportation Design and Construction Industry
title_short Analysis of the State of Practice and Best Practices for Alternative Project Delivery Methods in the Transportation Design and Construction Industry
title_full Analysis of the State of Practice and Best Practices for Alternative Project Delivery Methods in the Transportation Design and Construction Industry
title_fullStr Analysis of the State of Practice and Best Practices for Alternative Project Delivery Methods in the Transportation Design and Construction Industry
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the State of Practice and Best Practices for Alternative Project Delivery Methods in the Transportation Design and Construction Industry
title_sort analysis of the state of practice and best practices for alternative project delivery methods in the transportation design and construction industry
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.27405
_version_ 1718700591700508672