Programming and planning Flashcards

1
Q

What is float and what are some different types of float?

A

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)
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2
Q

What is the critical path?

A
  • 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
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3
Q

What is a dependency in a programme?

A

Where a task or activity is reliant on another task/activity to complete before it can start

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4
Q

Level 3 - Summary of Experience - Example 2

What key factors did you consider when preparing the Basildon Park programme?

A
  • 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
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5
Q

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?

A
  • 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
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6
Q

Level 2 - Summary of Experience - Example 1

What are the timeframes for an OJEU tender?

A
  • Open Tender is 35 calendar days

- 10 days standstill period

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7
Q

What advice would you give a client, post-contract, on how to speed up a programme?

A

Instruct the contractor to accelerate

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8
Q

What are the risks associated with acceleration?

A
  • 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
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9
Q

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)?

A
  • What is your governance process and timings, key meetings, etc.?
  • When do you want to complete?
  • What procurement route would you consider?
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10
Q

How do I get from one RIBA stage to the next?

A
  • Stage gate approvals

- Client sign-off of key deliverables within the stage

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11
Q

What are the four different types of logic links within a programme?

A

Start to start
Start to finish
Finish to start
Finish to finish

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12
Q

Name some methods of assessing an EOT claim?

A
  • Planned Impacted method
  • Time Impact Analysis
  • Time-slice Window Analysis
  • Collapsed As-Built Analysis
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13
Q

What is involved in the Impacted As-Planned Analysis? What are the advantages / disadvantages?

A

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

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14
Q

What is involved in the Time Impact Analysis? What are the advantages / disadvantages?

A

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
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15
Q

What is involved in the Time-slice Window Analysis? What are the advantages / disadvantages?

A

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
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16
Q

What is involved in the Collapsed As-Built Analysis? What are the advantages / disadvantages?

A

Retrospective analysis by removing the delay event from the programme and seeing the impact on the completion date

Advantages:
- Precise delay period attributable to that cause

Disadvantages:

  • Logic-links may have to be introduced to an as-built programme
  • Measures only incremental delay as the completion date will not collapse further than the closest near critical path
  • Reliant on good records
17
Q

What is involved in the As-Planned vs As-Build Analysis? What are the advantages / disadvantages?

A

Technique to compare the planned timings of the programme activities with the actual timings

Advantages:
- Simple / cheap

Disadvantages:
- May not provide sufficient analysis of delay events