After completing as-built schedule, I sugest you compare it with the target schedule, the contractor had (should have) submitted before starting the work.
-Zubaer
Member for
20 years 6 months
Member for20 years6 months
Submitted by Rashid Iqbal on Wed, 2005-05-04 11:27
If you go AACE web site, you can find a large number of articles on this subject. The authors of these articles have also cited numerous court cases as well. You can observe that most of the authorities have categorized the delays as follows:
Excusable and compensable
Excusable and non-compensable and
Non excusable
You can find their descriptions and the details of the methodologies to be deployed for quantifying and proving causation in the above mentioned articles/web site. For example, the second type would be due to both the parties in parallel networks etc. Though in any case it is fairly a tricky and a contentious issue and would not be as easy as explained in literature.
Member for
21 years 9 monthsRE: Time Impact Analysis using P3
After completing as-built schedule, I sugest you compare it with the target schedule, the contractor had (should have) submitted before starting the work.
-Zubaer
Member for
20 years 6 monthsRE: Time Impact Analysis using P3
If you go AACE web site, you can find a large number of articles on this subject. The authors of these articles have also cited numerous court cases as well. You can observe that most of the authorities have categorized the delays as follows:
Excusable and compensable
Excusable and non-compensable and
Non excusable
You can find their descriptions and the details of the methodologies to be deployed for quantifying and proving causation in the above mentioned articles/web site. For example, the second type would be due to both the parties in parallel networks etc. Though in any case it is fairly a tricky and a contentious issue and would not be as easy as explained in literature.
Regards
Rashid