Residential compounds (villas construction) normally are divided into three major elements in construction phase.
1) Villas
2) Infra Works
3) and Common Facilities / Recreational Buildings
Most Contractors finished first the infrastructure works (underground utilities, road works, etc), then construct the villas and common facilities. You can group typical Villas into one sub-element in the schedule.
Possible work packages are:
Infra Works
- Site preparation
- MEP works
- Road works and hardscaping
- Landscaping
- Boundary wall
Villas & Common Facilities
- Structural works
- Blockworks and plastering
- Metal works
- Kitchen cabinets and wardrobes
- Waterproofing works
- Doors & windows
- Tiling works
- Drywall partitioning & painting works
- Suspended ceilings, if in Contract
- Mirrors
- Equipment
- MEP works
You have to get Clients approval of the schedule and let him/her lead in having it followed by all stakeholders.
Look for clauses in the Contract that requires them to follow the program of works.
Hope from above details you can have an idea in sequencing your works.
There should be a plan for sure. You should ask the sequence to whom gonna build it. Subcontractor, site engineer, foreman etc. You have cards in your hands also. Tell them if they cannot give you a sequence and time, or will not continue through your path then the procurement of the main materials as concrete reinforcement, wet surfaces, etc. will be late to perform the job. And if it is a subcontractor, you can threat him with penalties or early contract termination due to end of continuity of the work.
From technical aspect of view, your CLIENT need to accept the duration and link changes on your active schedule. This may lead to a change in critical path and some variances which differs in scheduling programs and cost rules. Planner must be carefull when dealing with these.
As long as your crew has no intention to follow the plan, or lacks the capacity to read and understand it, you are being paid to do a job which is irrelevant. Well done?
Member for
17 years 3 months
Member for17 years3 months
Submitted by Samer Zawaydeh on Wed, 2009-04-29 15:35
In addition to Mikes comment, can you please google the "Line of Balance" technique in planning. I believe that it is used for repetitive projects like your case.
Member for
20 years 2 monthsRE: horizontal projects schedule
Dear Michael,
Residential compounds (villas construction) normally are divided into three major elements in construction phase.
1) Villas
2) Infra Works
3) and Common Facilities / Recreational Buildings
Most Contractors finished first the infrastructure works (underground utilities, road works, etc), then construct the villas and common facilities. You can group typical Villas into one sub-element in the schedule.
Possible work packages are:
Infra Works
- Site preparation
- MEP works
- Road works and hardscaping
- Landscaping
- Boundary wall
Villas & Common Facilities
- Structural works
- Blockworks and plastering
- Metal works
- Kitchen cabinets and wardrobes
- Waterproofing works
- Doors & windows
- Tiling works
- Drywall partitioning & painting works
- Suspended ceilings, if in Contract
- Mirrors
- Equipment
- MEP works
You have to get Clients approval of the schedule and let him/her lead in having it followed by all stakeholders.
Look for clauses in the Contract that requires them to follow the program of works.
Hope from above details you can have an idea in sequencing your works.
Best regards,
R. Catalan
Member for
17 years 5 monthsRE: horizontal projects schedule
Hi Trevor,
There should be a plan for sure. You should ask the sequence to whom gonna build it. Subcontractor, site engineer, foreman etc. You have cards in your hands also. Tell them if they cannot give you a sequence and time, or will not continue through your path then the procurement of the main materials as concrete reinforcement, wet surfaces, etc. will be late to perform the job. And if it is a subcontractor, you can threat him with penalties or early contract termination due to end of continuity of the work.
From technical aspect of view, your CLIENT need to accept the duration and link changes on your active schedule. This may lead to a change in critical path and some variances which differs in scheduling programs and cost rules. Planner must be carefull when dealing with these.
Best Regards,
Safak
Member for
19 years 10 monthsRE: horizontal projects schedule
Hi Trevor
At least there will be some pretty wall paper for the site hut.
Best regards
Mike Testro
Member for
19 years 11 monthsRE: horizontal projects schedule
As long as your crew has no intention to follow the plan, or lacks the capacity to read and understand it, you are being paid to do a job which is irrelevant. Well done?
Member for
17 years 3 monthsRE: horizontal projects schedule
Dear Michael,
In addition to Mikes comment, can you please google the "Line of Balance" technique in planning. I believe that it is used for repetitive projects like your case.
With kind regards,
Samer
Member for
19 years 10 monthsRE: horizontal projects schedule
Hi Michael
Set up a single bottom up programme for each villa type - this is level 4
Summarise each villa type - this is level 3.
Copy the summary for each of the villas - This is level 2
Create logic links between each villa to represent whatever is the driving logic - for instance:
1. Resource availabilty
2. Plot release schedule
3. Cash flow - sales
4. Anything else
Then summarise the villas into the whole project - this is level 1.
You will now have a logic linked programme that is easliy adjusted if the level 2 programme sequence has to be changed.
Best regards
Mike Testro