Soft landings - A persuasive case
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Transcript of Soft landings - A persuasive case
Soft Landings a persuasive case
Once upon a time…
There was a project …
And this project had a visionary client . . .
Visionary client
…who pulled together a great team of designers to devise a low carbon, award-winning building.
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Visionary client
The architect had loads of experience with passive solar design…
The engineers had loads of experience with renewable energy systems
Architect who knows the
importance of a North symbol
Low Carbon Consultant
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The client appointed a sustainability consultant…
…And an external BREEAM assessor….
Many of the right ingredients for a sustainable building were in place…
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The consultants helped the client get grants for renewables
The scheme design specified low-energy heating and cooling systems
Scheme design modelling suggested an A-rated EPC and BREEAM Excellent
With one of these for back-up
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The budget was tight…
The client chose a design and build procurement on a guaranteed price
The scheme design was passed to the contractor and the contractor’s design team did the detail design..
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The tender returns were too expensive by about £500K. This affected some key design details
Value engineering cut out non-critical items, and brought the project back on budget
Cost of Unnecessary
design
Unnecessary costs of
components
Unnecessary costs of
materials
Unnecessary cost of
buildability
Unnecessary life cycle cost
The VE vision
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Negative consequences of VE saw the controls system re-engineered to a cheaper system
Cost of Unnecessary
design
Unnecessary costs of
components
Unnecessary costs of
materials
Unnecessary cost of
buildability
Unnecessary life cycle cost
Systems that lost critical components, or which needed some re-design, were never checked for integrity…
Design subtleties
engineered out
Cheaper components sourced by contractors
Loss of robustness in
fittings
Not enough attention to
commissioning
Life-cycle considerations abandoned for
lowest price
The VE vision The VE reality
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Time and cost issues trumped quality…
The lack of a commissioning strategy saw commissioning rushed and unfinished at PC
Stresses and strains in the project team led to a break down in communication and trust
Commissioning
Practical completion and
move in
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Client left the contractor and project manager in
charge and didn’t provide leadership
Client-side designers watched from afar and couldn’t influence what they couldn’t see or be
invited to comment upon
Packaged sub-contractors often
in charge of critical details
M&E contractor and novated design team
reported to main contractor
Occupants wait for the move in date, but had
minimal support, training and
guidance
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Design detailing was poor, and the controls unmanageably complex
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When the building opened, the staff were ill-prepared, the energy metering didn’t work properly, and the energy use was much higher than the client expected
The contractors only attended site to deal with
defects
It took 9 months to get the O&M manuals…
The gas boilers were set up on the BMS to take the lead on heating, not the GSHP….
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The as-built EPC was a B…but the DEC became an E
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A BUS occupant survey 12 months later showed the occupants didn’t like the building
Although it won an architectural award and
occupants thought it looked quite good…!
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Everyone set out with great intentions, but they foundered on over-ambitous targets, poorly informed cost-cutting, over-complex systems, inadequate commissioning, rushed handover, minimal end-user training, and a lack of post-handover support.
That would normally be
~THE END ~
But the client had another project planned, and the
consultants said “we need to learn from experience…”
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…So they said… ….why don’t we adopt the BSRIA Soft Landings process to make the next building better…?
So they did…
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• The lead designers gave the client a copy of the Soft Landings Core Principles
• The client liked what it read
• “Will it cost me more, it asked?”
• “Much less than the cost of failures, time wasted, and energy bills being far higher than you intended,” said the designers
• “OK, I’m interested, said the client…”
• …What do we do next?
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• Adopt the Soft Landings Framework as the primary approach to managing the project
• Use the BSRIA guidance How to procure Soft Landings to embed Soft Landings in the Client’s Requirements and the contract using the proposed clauses
• Invite tenders on willingness to do Soft Landings (not their price)
• Make sure at least one of the primary designers joins the BSRIA Soft Landings User Group to gain insights
• Commit to a period of professional aftercare and POE
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Everyone on the project team focused on actual operational outcomes
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• Existing programme management processes were developed to accommodate Soft Landings
• There was no need to reinvent the wheel. They made use of existing meetings and tools
• They found what they could for free, what could be achieved from modifying existing project activities, and what was extra and needed to be paid-for
• Soft Landings Champions were appointed on the client and project teams
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Soft Landings Process Map – stage-by-stage
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• The project team adopted reality-checking at key stages of the project
• They checked energy, usability and maintainability issues
• This informed commissioning, training, fine-tuning and a CIBSE TM54 energy model
• It ensured risky and innovative systems got more attention beyond design reviews
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More attention to performance metrics – energy and occupants
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A through commissioning plan was set early on
Staged commissioning proved insightful: thermography surveys and pressure tests
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The move-in, and training and support was well-planned
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User guides were simple, updatable, and accessible
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Far more effort was put into end-user guidance
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Professional support in the aftercare period paid dividends
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The occupants liked this building a lot more
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A process that focuses on identifying operational risks before they become ingrained
and irredeemable problems
A method of managing those risks during briefing, design, construction, handover and
initial operation
Support for those risks during the first few operating seasons
The application of experience and feedback from earlier projects to eliminate or
reduce risks, and focus on ways to enhance performance
Soft Landings help you manage performance risks
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Final observations
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What clients and industry need now is a helpful degree of convergence
On processes and procedures On training and technical support On terminology, on the cost benefits, on the contractual requirements In reporting procedures and risk management methods (in BIM) On definitions of operational outcomes and performance requirements On metrics for measuring success – both quantitative and qualitative
Government Soft Landings and BIM
from 2016
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Technical criteria
…To many clients, the CONTEXTUAL CRITERIA are much more important than the technical criteria in judging the success of a building
Which means we need to find ways of assessing them – a big challenge
Contextual criteria
Quality of work
environment, space use, resource efficiency,
health and well-being, productivity – zero FM
complaints
?
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Soft Landings Challenges and opportunities
Q: How can you make Soft Landings work on your projects?
Is there really any alternative?
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The Soft Landings Framework Includes all the procedures for applying Soft Landings, plus checklists and generic work plans Soft Landings Core Principles The main requirements for defining a full Soft Landings project Soft Landings for schools The case for Soft Landings 1: Energy cost variations BREEAM 2011 and Soft Landings
Download from www.softlandings.org.uk
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