Written by Thomas Klein, Customer Success Manager
As a former utility engineering project manager, I understand the difficulty in planning large projects that span multiple years in the context of a capital budget. Removing cost risks to quarterly and annual budgets often meant phasing projects in a manner that allocated appropriate funding over a fixed time span. Fixing the budget across multiple phases typically left the construction schedule at risk instead.
Now, modern project management theory tells us we can have all three with appropriate planning and project management principles. However, in my experience with large projects in the built environment, I have found achieving all three to be somewhat difficult in practice.
For me, part of the difficulty in achieving success on cost, schedule, and quality was that planning later phases of a project was typically based off early inaccurate ROM estimates for schedule and cost. In other words, early project phases were based off decent estimates and later phases were based off of a crystal ball. Then as project delivery progressed into later phases, I’d find myself stuck with large variances to address.
Ultimately the underlying issue I faced for later project phases was poor initial estimates. Recently I have noticed that by leveraging modern technology in the planning stages, there’s a greater chance of achieving better schedule and cost estimates for the later stages.
A technology that I see serving the role of phase planning well is the Transcend Design Generator. When I first saw the Transcend Design Generator in action, the project phasing use case was actually one of my initial thoughts on how to leverage the platform. Most users tend to see the Transcend Design Generator as a way to create a conceptual design for a single project and recognize the ability to run multiple designs to compare single scenarios. But by overlapping designs, you can plan for later phases. In other words, if you split a single project design into several mini designs (one representing each phase you want to plan and estimate), you can use the separate output document packages to perform the necessary planning steps to reduce risks in the later phases of a project when it comes time to go into construction.
I’ll go over the mechanics of how to split projects into mini designs in a future article. For the purposes of this post, I will stick to the project management and capital planning application of the Transcend Design Generator.
For the folks who prefer visuals, here is the difference between planning multi-phase projects with and without the Transcend Design Generator.