ICE Conditions of Contract
The ICE Conditions of Contract (CoC) were published by Thomas Telford on behalf of the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE), the Association of Consulting Engineers (ACE) and the Civil Engineering Contractors Association (CECA). The first edition was published in 1945 and the seventh and final edition was published in 2001. During this time it was the dominant form of contract for civil engineering.
The key characteristics of the contract were:
- Valuation by measurement.
- Engineering responsibility for design.
- Engineer as the impartial certifier and valuer.
- Engineer's decision as the first stage of dispute resolution.
When the seventh edition was being prepared, pressure started to build for ICE to withdraw its support for CoC in favour of NEC.
NEC was first published in 1993 as the New Engineering Contract. It is a suite of construction contracts intended to promote partnering and collaboration between the contractor and client. It was developed as a reaction to more traditional forms of construction contract which were seen by some as adversarial. The third edition, NEC3 was published in 2005. NEC is a division of Thomas Telford, the commercial arm of ICE.
In 2001, at the launch of the seventh edition of CoC, Author, Brian Eggleston wrote ‘ One strongly expressed view was that with the Institution's New Engineering Contract (now called NEC Engineering and Construction Contract) steadily gaining ground and recognition there was no point in continuing the publication of traditional ICE Conditions…. My own view is that not only is there room for both sets of conditions in the industry but there is need for both. It is a matter of horses for courses as to which type of contract is best for any particular project. The New Engineering Contract requires project management skills, high staffing levels and a prominent place on office desks. Traditional ICE contracts have been satisfactorily run for decades and in thousands by civil engineers practising their ordinarily professional skills, frequently with mud on their boots and with the Conditions rarely on the office desk. The strength of the Conditions is in their consistency and continuity and by any standards they must be regarded as one of the most successful standard forms ever published.”
Despite this, with the growing popularity of NEC, in 2009 the ICE Council formally endorsed the NEC contracts and ICE transferred its part in the ownership of CoC to ACE and CECA. ICE, ACE and CECA continue to hold reference copies of the last published version of the ICE Conditions of Contract, but no longer support it or offer it for sale.
In August 2011, ACE and CECA relaunched CoC as the Infrastructure Conditions of Contract (ICC) a standard suite of forms of contract largely based on CoC.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
- Atkins v Secretary of State for Transport.
- Collaborative practices.
- Construction contract.
- Contract conditions.
- FIDIC.
- Infrastructure conditions of contract.
- Institution of Civil Engineers.
- JCT.
- Latham Report
- NEC contract change management systems.
- NEC contracts - road development and management schemes.
- NEC early contractor involvement.
- NEC3
- Procurement route.
Featured articles and news
Gregor Harvie argues that AI is state-sanctioned theft of IP.
Many resources for visitors aswell as new features for members.
Using technology to empower communities
The Community data platform; capturing the DNA of a place and fostering participation, for better design.
Heat pump and wind turbine sound calculations for PDRs
MCS publish updated sound calculation standards for permitted development installations.
Homes England creates largest housing-led site in the North
Successful, 34 hectare land acquisition with the residential allocation now completed.
Scottish apprenticeship training proposals
General support although better accountability and transparency is sought.
The history of building regulations
A story of belated action in response to crisis.
Moisture, fire safety and emerging trends in living walls
How wet is your wall?
Current policy explained and newly published consultation by the UK and Welsh Governments.
British architecture 1919–39. Book review.
Conservation of listed prefabs in Moseley.
Energy industry calls for urgent reform.
Heritage staff wellbeing at work survey.
A five minute introduction.
50th Golden anniversary ECA Edmundson apprentice award
Showcasing the very best electrotechnical and engineering services for half a century.
Welsh government consults on HRBs and reg changes
Seeking feedback on a new regulatory regime and a broad range of issues.
CIOB Client Guide (2nd edition) March 2025
Free download covering statutory dutyholder roles under the Building Safety Act and much more.