Programming and planning Flashcards
What is float and what are some different types of float?
Float is the amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying the subsequent activity or critical path.
Some types of float are:
- Total float: time an activity can be delayed without delaying the planned completion date
- Time Risk Allowance: duration allowed in each activity by the contractor to account for the risk of not completing the activity in the minimum possible period (owned by contractor)
- Terminal Float: duration between planned completion and current contract completion date (owned by contractor)
What is the critical path?
- The longest sequence of activities in a project which must be completed on time for the project to complete on due date
- Critical path activities have no float, any delay will result in a delay to the overall completion date
What is a dependency in a programme?
Where a task or activity is reliant on another task/activity to complete before it can start
Level 3 - Summary of Experience - Example 2
What key factors did you consider when preparing the Basildon Park programme?
- The client’s governance procedures
- The level of risk involved in each option
- The overall sequence of the programme tasks
- The correct logic links to use
- The critical path of the project
- Procurement and construction timelines due to being Grade 1
Level 3 - Summary of Experience - Example 1
What advice did you give the client in relation to the critical path and what other options were considered?
- Advice was that the programme advantage for taking a much more commercially risk approach was minimal, therefore not worth it
- Advised that there are factors out of our control which would impact the programme and should be considered in the assessment of delivery risk
Level 2 - Summary of Experience - Example 1
What are the timeframes for an OJEU tender?
- Open Tender is 35 calendar days
- 10 days standstill period
What advice would you give a client, post-contract, on how to speed up a programme?
Instruct the contractor to accelerate
What are the risks associated with acceleration?
- Acceleration activities don’t impact the critical path
- If using shift work; can lead to inconsistencies in the quality of work
- Night/weekend work can be expensive due to enhanced pay requirements
- Imbalance between supervision, labour, plant and materials can affect productivity
- More resources means more welfare, higher risk of H&S, higher risk of one trade damaging another trades
When you’re developing a master programme for a client, what are some of the first questions you’d ask a client to help you develop that master programme (things that are different for every client)?
- What is your governance process and timings, key meetings, etc.?
- When do you want to complete?
- What procurement route would you consider?
How do I get from one RIBA stage to the next?
- Stage gate approvals
- Client sign-off of key deliverables within the stage
What are the four different types of logic links within a programme?
Start to start
Start to finish
Finish to start
Finish to finish
Name some methods of assessing an EOT claim?
- Planned Impacted method
- Time Impact Analysis
- Time-slice Window Analysis
- Collapsed As-Built Analysis
What is involved in the Impacted As-Planned Analysis? What are the advantages / disadvantages?
Introducing a delay event sub-network into the baseline programme; needs to be logic-linked
Advantages:
- Simplest / least expensive
Disadvantages:
- Doesn’t consider actual progress and changes to the original programme
What is involved in the Time Impact Analysis? What are the advantages / disadvantages?
Introducing a delay event sub-network into updated programme; needs to be logic-linked
Advantages:
- Simple / inexpensive
- Contemporaneous critical path
Disadvantages:
- Doesn’t capture eventual delay as subsequent project progress is not considered
- Has to predict critical delay based on a future planned programme
What is involved in the Time-slice Window Analysis? What are the advantages / disadvantages?
Using updated programme, progress of works divided into time slices, actual critical path and critical delay status at the end of each slice retrospectively
Advantages:
- More sophisticated view on delay
- Removes complexities of reviewing project as a whole
Disadvantages:
- Only done retrospectively
- Requires more specialist analysis