Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Procurement and Tendering
- 1. PROCUREMENT - obtaining
goods and services in line with
clients requirements (time,
cost and quality) and their
attitude to risk.
- 1.1 Procurement Strategy
- Main factors:
time, cost, quality
and risk
- 1..2 Procurement
Routes
- 1.2.1 Traditional Lump
Sum/Fixed Price
- Provisional Sums / CDPS
- Fixed Price Contracts
- JCT Forms of Contract
- NEC Suite of Contracts
- Benefits/Considerations
- Remeasurement contract
- 1.2.5 Management Contracting
- Management contractor
programmes, packages and
obtains tenders for the
works
- Employer pays a fixed
management fee to contractor to
manage building of a project
- Liability - risk of cost and
programme lies with the
employer
- 1.2.2 Design and Build
- Employer's consultants develop
employers requirements into a brief
outling scheme design e.g. building
function, area required, services
performance criteria, basic finishes
information
- Single contractor
appointed to deliver
employers requirements,
own design team
- Possible to
novate clients
consultants to
complete design
- Contractor responsible for
delivering to cost, time and
quality
- Little flexibility
for changes
- May have heavy
cost and time
implications
- 2 variants to process:
a) develop and
construct b) package
deal
- 1.2.4 Construction Management
- Individual package
contracts held with
employer not
contractor
- 1.2.3 PFI
- Public sector procurement
of projects financed by
private sector
- Process: Phase 1 Strategic
Appraisal, Phase 2
Procurement and Phase 3
Operation
- 1.3 Other
procurement
options
- Measured term
- Target cost/GMP
- Cost plus
- 2. TENDERING - the bidding
process to obtain a price
and how a contractor is
appointed.
- 2.1 Main types of
tendering procedures
- Single-stage tendering
- RIBA Stage 4
- Two-stage tendering
- First stage - early
contractor involvement
during design process
- RIBA Stage 2 or 3
- Negotiated tender
- Single
contractor
- JCT Tendering Practice
Note 2012 - best
practice guidance
- 2.2 Practical Applications of
Tendering
- 2.1 Pre-tender
estimate (PTE)
- 1. Can the client afford the proposed development
2. Basis of comparison with tender returns
- NRM 1
- 2.2 Work Plans
- RIBA
- GRIP
- APM
- 2.3 Contractor Selection
- Open tendering
- Selective tendering
- Single contractor selection
- 2.4 OJEU
- 2.5 Tender period
- complexity, size, time of
year, market conditions
- Extensions - float in programme
- 2.6 Tender
documents
- Depending on contract type
- Invitiation to tender letter, form of tender,
contract conditions, instruction to tenderers
documents, project information, design
information, pricing document and appendices
- Project specific factors/abnormals
- Issuing tenders
- Traditional issue
- E-tendering
- RICS E-tendering guidance note
- 2.7 During the
tender process
- Queries, addenda,
mid-tender interviews,
withdrawals
- 2.8 Receiving tenders
- Tender opening,
tender reviews
- Checking for errors, raising
tender queries and conflicts in
information and
equalisation/normalisation
process
- 2.9 Post
tender
- Post tender
interviews
- Further items
to review
- Post tender estimate
- Tender report
and notifying
tenderers
- 2.3 Practical
considerations - Level 3