Quantcast

Federal Owners Forum Reveals Proposed Solutions to Common Federal Project Delivery Challenges


Notice: Undefined variable: title in /mnt/volume-nyc1-01/dbia.briteweb.com/uploads/cache/9203d2fb85359c88234f5ce1c137b521a5217ef4.php on line 8
Subscribe to our Blog


Notice: Undefined variable: content in /mnt/volume-nyc1-01/dbia.briteweb.com/uploads/cache/9203d2fb85359c88234f5ce1c137b521a5217ef4.php on line 10
;

Posted on

Federal Owners Forum Reveals Proposed Solutions to Common Federal Project Delivery Challenges

August 10, 2016

Thirteen (13) industry leaders representing eleven (11) federal agencies gathered for a full day to challenge thinking and play a major role in affecting positive change. The leaders addressed imperatives that hinder the federal sector’s ongoing ability to achieve optimal efficiency and performance in designing and constructing the built environment.

Washington, D.C., The Design-Build Institute of America (DBIA), the only organization that defines, teaches and promotes best practices in design-build, and the Society for American Military Engineers (SAME), which works to lead collaborative efforts to identify and resolve national security infrastructure-related challenges, co-hosted an open discussion and brainstorming session between various leaders in federal project delivery earlier this summer. The organizations recently released a summary report detailing things that work well, challenges and proposed solutions in federal project delivery from the perspective of the owners in attendance.

“While the forum was open to discussion as it relates to all project delivery, design-build project delivery immediately surfaced as something that works well when properly executed,” says Lisa Washington, Executive Director and CEO of DBIA. “The owners at the forum discussed early knowledge of costs and appropriate allocation of risk as the two main advantages of design-build. Furthermore, there was a large discussion on the critical role of procurement professionals – especially contracting officers – in unleashing innovation and creating better projects. For this reason, we will be hosting a similar forum in the near future featuring only contracting officers, in order to develop further recommendations.”

“By bringing together leaders from 11 different federal agencies, the forum was able to provide a broad assessment of the issues that government, working with industry, faces in delivering projects that benefit the nation,” says SAME Executive Director, Brig. Gen. Joe Schroedel, P.E., F.SAME, USA (Ret.). “From budget constraints, to agency staff turnover, to inconsistently defined requirements, neither government nor industry can solve these and other complex challenges alone. True industry-government collaboration focused on developing solutions, along with establishing the right tools, people and processes — as outlined in the Federal Owners’ Forum Summary Report — will be essential to successful project delivery in the federal marketplace.”

The leaders’ discussion focused on three areas as the driving force behind effective projects/project delivery, regardless of the delivery method:

  1. The Right Tools
  2. The Right People
  3. The Right Processes

The report summarizes the discussions related to each area, and describes various proposed solutions. In some instances, the solution lies with the federal agency. In most, however, the solution lies with collaborative change. It is these solutions that will drive the DBIA and SAME agendas in the coming year.

In summary, optimal conditions for success, described in detail in the summary report, regardless of the project delivery method selected include:

  • Pick a partner – not an enemy;
  • Think “team first” to drive project quality;
  • Pre-select on qualifications;
  • Incentivize and align A/E and contractors;
  • Survey past performance in CPARS;
  • Pick the best team with the best proposal;
  • Issue life-cycle oriented, performance-focused RFPs; and
  • Ensure proper workforce development (in particular as it relates to the unique aspects of integrated design-build).

DBIA and SAME have made the document available here in hopes of fostering ongoing industry involvement in improving outcomes in project delivery. Lisa Washington, CAE, and/or Brig. Gen. Joe Schroedel are available to discuss the document further. To schedule an interview, please contact Geoffrey Corey, DBIA’s Director of Communications, at gcorey@dbia.org, or Stephen Karl, SAME Communications Senior Manager at skarl@same.org.

 

Established in 1993, the Design-Build Institute of America (DBIA) is the only organization that defines, teaches and promotes best practices in design-build project delivery. Design-build is an integrated approach that delivers design and construction services under one contract with a single point of responsibility. Owners select design-build to achieve best value while meeting schedule, cost and quality goals. Learn more about design-build and DBIA’s certification and other programs at www.dbia.org.