Government Construction Strategy 2011 2015
Note: In March 2016, this strategy was superceded by the Government Construction Strategy 2016 2020.
Contents |
[edit] Introduction
The Government Construction Strategy (available from the gov.uk website) was published in May 2011. It was prepared by the Efficiency and Reform Group, working with the Construction Sector Unit of the Department for Business Innovation and Skills (BIS), and Infrastructure UK (IUK). The strategy was overseen by the Government Construction Board, originally chaired by the Chief Construction Adviser. However, when that role was abolished in November 2015, Cabinet Office minister Nick Hancock took over responsibility.
The intention of the strategy was to reduce the cost of public sector construction by up to 20% by the end of this parliament, and to stimulate growth in construction.
The strategy acknowledged that whilst public sector construction projects account for 40% of the £110bn per annum expenditure on construction in the UK, the government had not been very effective at exploiting this enormous purchase power. It set out measures by which the government could make better use of its power and at the same time, lead what it saw as much needed changes in the industry.
The strategy followed on from the Latham Report (Constructing the Team, 1994) and the Egan Report (Rethinking Construction, 1998), and made a similar, somewhat damning assessment of the industry, suggesting amongst many criticisms that:
- The UK does not get full value from public sector construction.
- There is broad consensus that construction under-performs.
- There are poor and inconsistent procurement practices leading to waste and inefficiency
- There are low levels of standardisation, and fragmentation of the public sector client base.
[edit] Proposals
The strategy called for '…a profound change in the relationship between public authorities and the construction industry to ensure the Government consistently gets a good deal and the country gets the social and economic infrastructure it needs for the long-term…'
The detailed proposals set out in the strategy included:
- Publishing a quarterly, two-year forward programme of infrastructure and construction projects.
- Using benchmarking to enable government clients to challenge the market on cost, without sacrificing value. Analysis had shown that differences in costs across government projects cannot be explained by differences in the projects themselves.
- Using common standards and specifications across government.
- Encouraging standardisation and off-site fabrication of building components (and where appropriate, building systems and buildings themselves).
- Challenging client capability, project governance and controls (for example through the development of an Integrated Assurance and Assessment Process and adoption of the Starting Gate Review process (see the article on the Major Projects Authority for more information).
- Using outcome-based specifications (or performance specifications) rather than prescriptive specifications to define client needs.
- Streamlining commissioning and procurement through the use of standard forms of contract (generally now the New Engineering Contract (NEC) as GC Works contracts have been dropped), standard pre-qualification processes (such as the use of PAS 91) and fair payment practices.
- Adopting procurement routes that encourage competition, incentivisation and integrate the supply team.
- The phased roll-out of Building Information Modelling (BIM), resulting in a requirement for fully-collaborative 3D BIM on all centrally-procured construction contracts by 2016.
Six Task Groups were established for different areas of the strategy:
- Procurement / Lean Client.
- Standards / Lean Supply.
- FM / Soft Landings.
- Data and Benchmarking.
- BIM Strategy.
- Performance Management.
[edit] Progress
In July 2012, the government published Government Construction Strategy: One Year On Report and Action Plan Update:
- The report stated an intention to achieve savings of '15 to 20%' by the end of the parliament (rather than 'up to 20%' as stated in the original strategy).
- It found that £72 million of actual savings had been made in the first year, and projected savings of £279m (including the £72m achieved savings) in whole-life costs on a spend of £2.6bn in the main procuring departments. This was described as representing 10% projected savings, although clearly projected savings are not actual savings, and there could be disagreement about how such savings are calculated. It was also be argued that the savings that had been achieved were in part the result of the economic downturn rather than government policy.
- In addition, benchmarking and cost reduction trajectories were published for the seven main procuring departments.
- Alongside the main report, the final reports of the Procurement / Lean Client Task Group and the Standards / Lean Supply Task Group were published and the two groups were disbanded.
- It was also announced that the Achieving Excellence in Construction guidance previously referred to in the Government Construction Standards had been archived, although no alternative guidance was published.
- Government Soft Landings (GSL) was moved to the BIM Task Group. It was thought that in parallel to the roll out of BIM, the government may mandate a GSL handover protocol for central government projects by 2016.
In June 2013, a survey of construction clients by Building magazine found that 47.1% of public sector clients had made no changes in response to the Government Construction Strategy, and only 5% said they had changed their practices significantly. Some proposed reforms, such as the adoption of project bank accounts were actually being led by private rather than public sector clients. However, there was found to be significant adoption of BIM among public sector clients, with 38% saying they had used BIM on at least one project.
In July 2013, the Government published: Construction 2025, Industrial Strategy: government and industry in partnership, setting out its long-term vision for ‘…how industry and Government will work together to put Britain at the forefront of global construction…’
Rather ambitiously, the report proposed:
- 33% reduction in the initial cost of construction and the whole life costs of built assets.
- 50% reduction in the overall time, from inception to completion, for newbuild and refurbished assets.
- 50% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions in the built environment.
- 50% reduction in the trade gap between total exports and total imports for construction products and materials.
It was not entirely clear what the relationship was between the Government Construction Strategy and Construction 2025, or between the Government Construction Board and the Construction Leadership Council (a joint industry / government body established to oversee Construction 2025). Construction 2025 simply stated that one of its objectives was to “Drive procurement efficiency and explore options for further efficiency gains in the procurement process, led by the Government Construction Board and the IUK Client Group.”
On 2 July 2014, the Cabinet Office published 'Government Construction, Construction Cost Reductions, Cost Benchmarks, & Cost Reduction Trajectories to March 2014' in which it claimed that there was '... evidence that the Government Construction Strategy’s overarching target - to achieve a sustainable reduction in the cost of construction by 15-20% by the end of this parliament - is being achieved more widely across government.'
In March 2016, however, the strategy was superceded by the Government Construction Strategy 2016 2020. This revealed that only £3.3 billion had been saved over the entire period of the first government construction strategy compared to the £8.8 billion a year that had been targeted. The Government Construction Strategy 2016 2020 set a much less ambitious target of £1.7 billion over the whole period 2016-2020.
[edit] Criticism
The strategy was broadly welcomed, but there was some scepticism about whether the government would follow it through, and how the roll out of BIM would be implemented, along with some criticism that the increasing use of large, long-term contracts and framework agreements might act as a barrier to entry to new suppliers and so a barrier to innovation.
The size of the savings projected was also questioned given that the recession meant the industry was already at its least profitable and most productive since records began (ref Constructing Excellence and Glenigan: Industry performance report).
Despite a great number of reports about the construction industry, and numerous attempts to improve efficiency, the perception persists that the industry is wasteful and adversarial, it might be inferred therefore either that; under the circumstances the industry operates more effectively than it appears from the outside; expectations are unrealistic; or recommendations have been consistently poorly implemented.
Transforming Infrastructure Performance, published by the Infrastructure and Projects Authority (IPA) in December 2017 committed that the IPA would 'refresh' the Government Construction Strategy in 2018.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
- Banwell Report.
- Building Information Modelling.
- Building our Industrial Strategy: green paper.
- Centrally procured public projects.
- Chief construction adviser.
- Construction 2025.
- Construction Operations Building Information Exchange (COBie).
- Construction Industry Council.
- Construction Industry Statistics.
- Construction Leadership Council.
- Cost led procurement.
- Efficiency and Reform Group.
- Egan Report.
- Government Construction and Infrastructure Pipelines.
- Government Construction Board.
- Government Construction Strategy 2016 2020.
- Government departments responsibility for construction.
- Infrastructure UK.
- Integrated project insurance.
- Latham Report.
- List of construction industry reports through history.
- Major Projects Authority.
- National Infrastructure Delivery Plan 2016-2021.
- National Infrastructure Plan.
- Open data - how can it aid the development of the construction industry?
- Supply chain management.
- Transforming Infrastructure Performance.
[edit] External references
- The Government Construction Strategy.
- Government Construction Strategy: One Year On Report and Action Plan Update.
- Cabinet Office: Common minimum standards (referred to in the Government Construction Strategy - to be developed into the 'Construction Standards').
- (Ref 1) BIS: Government names new Chief Construction Adviser. 30 July 2012.
- Building: Client Intelligence 2013.
- Construction 2025, Industrial Strategy: government and industry in partnership. July 2013.
Featured articles and news
Quality Planning for Micro and Small to Medium Sized Enterprises
A CIOB Academy Technical Information sheet.
A briefing on fall protection systems for designers
A legal requirement and an ethical must.
CIOB Ireland launches manifesto for 2024 General Election
A vision for a sustainable, high-quality built environment that benefits all members of society.
Local leaders gain new powers to support local high streets
High Street Rental Auctions to be introduced from December.
Infrastructure sector posts second gain for October
With a boost for housebuilder and commercial developer contract awards.
Sustainable construction design teams survey
Shaping the Future of Sustainable Design: Your Voice Matters.
COP29; impacts of construction and updates
Amid criticism, open letters and calls for reform.
The properties of conservation rooflights
Things to consider when choosing the right product.
Adapting to meet changing needs.
London Build: A festival of construction
Co-located with the London Build Fire & Security Expo.
Tasked with locating groups of 10,000 homes with opportunity.
Delivering radical reform in the UK energy market
What are the benefits, barriers and underlying principles.
Information Management Initiative IMI
Building sector-transforming capabilities in emerging technologies.
Recent study of UK households reveals chilling home truths
Poor insulation, EPC knowledge and lack of understanding as to what retrofit might offer.
Embodied Carbon in the Built Environment
Overview, regulations, detail calculations and much more.
Why the construction sector must embrace workplace mental health support
Let’s talk; more importantly now, than ever.
Ensuring the trustworthiness of AI systems
A key growth area, including impacts for construction.