Commencement of construction works
In very broad terms, the word ‘commencement’ means beginning something. In the construction industry this generally refers to the contractor beginning the construction works, ie the point at which site clearance, demolition, excavation or construction begins. For more information see: Construction operations definition.
Commencement of construction works will be proceeded by activities such as design, procurement and mobilisation, and there may be legal requirements that need to be satisfied, such as obtaining planning permission, satisfying planning conditions or planning obligations, obtaining building regulations approval, obtaining a party wall agreement, notifying the Health and Safety Executive and so on. For more information see: What approvals are needed before construction begins.
In addition, commencement may be required before a certain point, for example, within 3 years of the date planning permission was granted, or within three years from the date of deposit of plans for building regulations approval.
Commencement may also have contractual implications, as the date for possession of the site by the contractor may be set out in the contract. If the client fails to give possession of the site to the contractor, and there are no provisions for delay in the contract, then they will be in breach of contract. Even if the contract does provide for delay in giving possession of the site to the contractor, the contractor may still be able to claim for an extension of time and perhaps loss and expense.
If no date for possession is included in the contract, then the site must be handed over to the contractor within a reasonable time after signing of the contract.
On commencement of the works, the contractor may become responsible for insurance, security of the site and so on, and may be obliged to progress regularly and diligently with the works, or to achieve certain key dates.
The term ‘commencement’ might also be used to refer to the commencement of an appointment, the commencement of a contract, commencement of legal proceedings and so on.
NB There is currently no legal UK definition of (as opposed to guidance on) "commencement" for the purposes of the building regulations. Knowing whether work has commenced will be critical to understanding whether approval has lapsed and/or whether work benefits from transitional provisions. Consequently, a legal definition of "commencement" is being considered.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
Featured articles and news
From studies, to books to a new project, with founder Emma Walshaw.
Types of drawings for building design
Still one of the most popular articles the A-Z of drawings.
Who, or What Does the Building Safety Act Apply To?
From compliance to competence in brief.
The remarkable story of a Highland architect.
Commissioning Responsibilities Framework BG 88/2025
BSRIA guidance on establishing clear roles and responsibilities for commissioning tasks.
An architectural movement to love or hate.
Don’t take British stone for granted
It won’t survive on supplying the heritage sector alone.
The Constructing Excellence Value Toolkit
Driving value-based decision making in construction.
Meet CIOB event in Northern Ireland
Inspiring the next generation of construction talent.
Reasons for using MVHR systems
6 reasons for a whole-house approach to ventilation.
Supplementary Planning Documents, a reminder
As used by the City of London to introduce a Retrofit first policy.
The what, how, why and when of deposit return schemes
Circular economy steps for plastic bottles and cans in England and Northern Ireland draws.
Join forces and share Building Safety knowledge in 2025
Why and how to contribute to the Building Safety Wiki.
Reporting on Payment Practices and Performance Regs
Approved amendment coming into effect 1 March 2025.
A new CIOB TIS on discharging CDM 2015 duties
Practical steps that can be undertaken in the Management of Contractors to discharge the relevant CDM 2015 duties.
Planning for homes by transport hubs
Next steps for infrastructure following the updated NPPF.
Comments
[edit] To make a comment about this article, or to suggest changes, click 'Add a comment' above. Separate your comments from any existing comments by inserting a horizontal line.