posted on 2009-06-22, 16:24authored bySimon Austin, Andrew Baldwin, John Steele
The construction industry is acutely aware of the need to improve the integration, planning and control
of its design and production processes. A number of projects undertaken within Loughborough,
Salford and Cambridge Universities, in collaboration with a number of construction industry
organisations, are addressing this issue by investigating, and developing tools to assist, the design
and construction process. Emerging from these projects is the common need for IT systems and
support that will facilitate the capture, storage and retrieval of project knowledge. It is only by relating
these compatible IT applications to a common and recognisable project process framework that
construction industry organisations will be able to make optimum use of the available technological
developments. This paper describes the development of techniques and strategies to support the
integrated planning and control of design through the collaboration of the main designers, suppliers
and contractor working on complex building projects, and discusses the relevance of clustering these
in relation to the phases and activities of a generic model of design and construction.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Citation
AUSTIN, S.A., BALDWIN, A.N. and STEELE, J., 2002. Improving building design through integrated planning and control. Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management, 9(3), pp. 249 - 258.