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Planning and Scheduling Highway Construction

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King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals LIFE CYCLE COSTING Appling The UK Manufacturing Industries Experience of Value Analysis Into Construction – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Planning and Scheduling Highway Construction


1

King Fahd University of Petroleum Minerals


LIFE CYCLE COSTING
Appling The UK Manufacturing Industries
Experience of Value Analysis Into Construction
D
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ARE-512
Presented by MUBARAK ALQAHTANI
I.D. 969260
SAADI ASSAF
January 12, 2008
2
  • Abstract
  • Value Analysis is concerned with the
    identification of best value. Too often its
    associated techniques are applied to new
    situations without consideration of its
    underlying philosophy.
  • There has been a fall off in the formal
    application of Value Analysis within UK
    Manufacturing Industries.
  • The principles are however still claimed to be
    accepted. Value Opportunities exist within the UK
    Construction Industry but Value Analysis is not
    practiced.
  • Can the experience of the UK Manufacturing
    Industries' informal commitment to Value Analysis
    be applied to the UK Construction Industry in
    order to gain acceptance of the Value Ethos.
    Keywords Value Analysis, Quantity Surveying,
    Procurement Procedures .

3
Outline
  • Introduction
  • The Development of Value Analysis
  • Opportunities for Value Analysis in Construction
  • Experience in UK Manufacturing Industries
  • Applying the Experience of the UK Manufacturing
    Industries to the Construction Industry
  • Current Reflections of Value Analysis in the UK
    Construction Industry
  • Conclusion

4
Introduction
  • "Value Analysis is an organized effort to obtain
    optimum value in a product, system or service by
    providing the necessary function at the lowest
    cost".

5
"Value Analysis is an organized effort to obtain
optimum value in a product, system or service by
providing the necessary function at the lowest
cost".
  • Value analysis is an example of an identifiable
    subject area. It however comprises previously
    established techniques, discipline and ideas.
    Value Analysis derives its uniqueness from the
    way in which the component elements are combined.
    Similarly the established subject of Value
    Analysis assumes further 'newness' when it is
    applied in a discipline other than the one for
    which it was originally developed.

6
Introduction
  • "Value may be defined as the relationship between
    function and cost. In all cases value is greatest
    when the cost of obtaining a required function or
    service, at a particular time and place with the
    essential qualities, is at a minimum. "

7
LOWEST COST REQUIRED PERFDRMANCE (OPTIMUM PERFORMANCE).
Total cost
Figure 1 Cost and Value in Relation to Performance
8
  • The Development of Value Analysis
  • L D Miles(l) is recognized as the 'Father of
    Value Analysis'.
  • He originally conceived the idea some 50 years
    ago when, while working as a design engineer with
    General Electric, he was surprised by the
    apparent lack of consideration given to cost. The
    advent of World War 11 put great pressures on
    resources.

9
  • Value Analysis is concerned with the search for
    best value To achieve this it must be more than
    just a cost control technique as cost can not be
    reduced at the expense of performance.
  • Value Analysis may use many varied techniques,
    some of which are more traditionally associated
    with cost control, e.g. Life Cycle Costing and
    Cost in Use Analysis, but the object is to
    establish best value not just lowest cost. This
    means that, unlike pure cost reduction, the
    levels of qualify and performance are 'not
    allowed to deteriorate.
  • This means that, unlike pure cost reduction, the
    levels of qualify and performance are 'not
    allowed to deteriorate.

10
Opportunities for Value Analysis in Construction
  • The objective of Value Analysis is to identify
    and eliminate unnecessary cost. Such value
    opportunities are not restricted to anyone part
    of the life cycle of a building. Value Analysis
    does however attempt to focus attention on those
    areas where there is potential for the greatest
    return on the effort exerted. Value Analysis
    would be most profitably applied where the net
    savings potential is greatest, as illustrated in
    Figure 2.

11
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12
A popular stage for applying Value Analysis is
during design which is an identifiable action
which offers large net saving potential.
Traditionally a design would be developed to In
developing a design through the application or
Value Analysis (possibly more properly termed
Value Engineering at this stage)
  • Value Analysis recognizes. Aesthetic Value as one
    of the needs to be addressed when balancing the
    design equation and by developing a Value Index
    (the ratio of the cost of the proposed design to
    the lowest cost alternative) a more objective
    evaluation can be made.

13
  • A second area popularly chosen for the
    application of Value Anal sis is the construction
    stage. As is evident from
  • The net savings potential is substantially
    reduced by this stage. Contractors can conduct
    Value Analysis exercises on their own operations
    to increase efficiency. Part of these benefits
    will be passed on to the building

14
Experience in UK Manufacturing Industries
  • Value Analysis was imported into the UK as a well
    developed set of procedures. These procedures had
    been developed in the US and were taken on board
    by UK managers, tantalized by the apparent
    potential for savings or because they were
    directed by a multi-national parent company or
    even to demonstrate their openness/acceptance for
    change.

15
  • In order to gauge current practice regarding the
    use of Value Analysis in the UK interviews were
    conducted with 6 firms. These firms represent
    heavy engineering, micro engineering, aerospace
    and petro-chemicals. All the organizations had
    formerly employed specialist Value Analysis
    staff. All but one however considered that they
    still had a commitment to the principles of Value
    Analysis and utilized techniques associated with
    Value Analysis. In two of the organizations all
    products are subject to review by an independent
    group, either during the design stages or at
    prototype stage. Although neither firm currently
    had Value Analysis staff they both considered
    that their staff were sufficiently familiar with
    the techniques to ensure that the original design
    work and the review embraced the value principle.

16
Applying the Experience of the UK Manufacturing
Industries to the Construction Industry
  • The early involvement of producers or production
    departments is seen as a valuable means of
    reducing production costs. In the Traditional UK
    procurement procedure the Architect completes the
    detail design before the Contractor is selected
    and there is no formal means for the Contractor
    to contribute to the 'design. The procedure of
    Management Contracting has been' developed with
    the intention of securing the independent
    contribution of a Contractor at the design stage.

17
  • At the other extreme from the Traditional
    procedure, Design and Build places the Contractor
    in full control of the design possibly excluding
    an independent Architect. Where size or cost
    precludes the use of Management Contracting and
    the project requires greater Architectural
    control than is possible through Design and
    Build, the Traditional procedure could be
    modified to more fully embrace Performance
    Specifications. This would reflect Value Analysis
    in that the function is defined in the
    performance specification, alternative solutions
    are developed by the competing contractors and if
    contractor selection is based on cost the lowest
    cost, solution is identified. _

18
Current Reflections of Value Analysis in the UK
Construction Industry
  • The foregoing illustrates how Value Analysis
    might be applied within the construction
    industry.
  • The following are two initiatives which introduce
    Value Analysis into UK construction

19
first is a procurement procedure which
incorporates features of US procedures.
  • second is in the Public Works Department of Local
    Government where Value

20
  • Analysis is to be directly applied as part of a
    rat1onalisation programmed. British Property
    Federation considered that the performance of the
    construction industry in the UK compared
  • unfavorably with other countries. In order to
    overcome the e shortcomings they developed their
    System for Building Design and Construction (6)
    This broke considerably with traditional UK
    procedures. Certain aspects can be seen as
    reflecting Value Analysis procedures.

21
  • The client is required to take greater
    responsibility especially at the early stages
    when a fully considered brief is to be prepared
    (functional. analysis). The Architect is required
    to develop the design
  • to the level which requires Architectural control
    allowing the Contractor to develop the 'detail'
    design
  • (This allows a variety of technical solutions
    to be developed, by the contractors, for the
    outstanding features).

22
Conclusion
  • Value Analysis has not had continuing support
    within the UK
  • manufacturing industries. In formal Value
    Analysis terms its use has encountered
    'roadblocks' which should be overcome.

23
  • The principles and some techniques however linger
    on " at a level which is apparently
    satisfactory to the users and the situations in
    which they find themselves. Should this be the
    'experience' that the construction industry gains
    from the manufacturing industry?

24
  • Critics of Value Analysis applied in construction
    have looked at techniques such as brainstorming,
    multi-criteria diagramming and numerical
    weighting of factors and have dismissed them as
    impractical or inappropriate in the construction
    industry. If we look beyond the techniques back
    to the origins of Value Analysis the basic
    motivation is appropriate to construction, that
    is to reduce cost through the development of
    alternative solutions.

25
  • The problems of the construction industry can be
    held to be different from other industries. There
    is a one-off product required to satisfy
    multiple-criteria which is produced by a unique
    grouping of personnel. The parties involved may
    have conflicting interests and the traditional
    approach fosters such divisions by requiring each
    party to defend their actions thus resulting in
    sub-optimization of the total project .

26
  • Value Analysis is concerned with the evaluation
    of function, cost and worth which can provide a
    unifying vehicle, directing effort to the mutual
    benefit of all parties and the total project.
    Further study is required to identify how best to
    apply Value Analysis to the UK construction
    situation in order to achieve acceptance of the
    procedures.

27
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