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Bay State OK's Limited Design-Build Usage
By William J. Angelo
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Gordon
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On July 19, 2004, when Lt. Governor Kerry
Healey signed a public construction reform act into law, Massachusetts
became the 46th state to adopt the use of design-build project
delivery. The law overcomes politics and a sordid history,
but still comes with conditions.
The new law allows design-build delivery,
but not finance or operations, on all public road and bridge
projects valued at more than $5 million and construction management-at-risk
on all building projects also valued at more than $5 million.
It also requires municipalities to hire a qualified project
manager on jobs costing more than $1.5 million and requires
that all general contractors and subcontractors be prequalified
and certified. But why limit design-build to just horizontal
work? The answer lies in the states archaic practices
and a lack of advocacy.
Twenty-five years ago, the Ward Commission
made a number of recommendations to the legislature in response
to widespread industry corruption. While resulting reforms
stamped out corruption, they also may have stifled innovation.
This led to complaints about a slow, expensive process that
resulted in a number of school construction problems, including
late completion and poor quality work, stemming from design-bid-build
delivery.
That was the catalyst for the creation
of the Special Commission on Public Construction early this
year. The commission was co-chaired by a state senator, state
representative and Christopher M. Gordon, director of capital
programs and Logan International Airport modernization at
Massport, a state agency wrapping-up a 10-year, $4.4 billion
upgrade program. Governor Mitt Romney (R) appointed Gordon.
The commission also includes 20 diverse
members selected from political and industry segments. It
held two full days of hearings, listening to contractors,
designers, unions, mayors, vendors and others talk about general
problems and some pet peeves, such as filed sub-bids, which
are required on large building projects.
After the hearings, the commission met
on a weekly basis to find solutions and alternative project
delivery systems were high on their list. Due to a number
of large projects completed in state, there were plenty of
knowledgeable engineers and lawmakers who thought they knew
how to achieve cost savings. And they spoke out. "People
liked CM because it was used successfully on special projects
in the state and wasnt a mystery," says Gordon.
"Road builders especially wanted design-build and they
made an appealing case." Demand was partly based on pilot
projects. "For the last 20 years, design-build was not
allowed, but gradually it started being used on a case-by-case
basis with prisons. Then the state tried it on a large mass-transit
project and a pilot program on State Route 3 and found it
was useful," says Peter M. Zuk, former Central Artery/Tunnel
project director and now chief program officer, London Underground
Ltd.
While the commission could have decided
on unlimited use of CM and design-build, time was tight because
of an extensive school backlog and the launching of a multi-billion
dollar building program by Romney. So the panel settled on
a compromise that could be expanded at a latter date. "The
commission was comfortable with CM for buildings and design-build
for roads, but they felt that expanding design-build into
buildings was a more complicated issue and they were not comfortable
with it, plus nobody was advocating its use for buildings,"
says Gordon. "Schools are complicated, expensive and
come with various site issues. Many people do not like design-build
usage on buildings, including designers and general contractors
who feel they would be shut out. The biggest resistance was
from the industry itself."
And so Massachusetts gets a partial victory.
"Using alternative delivery methods gives us more tools,"
says Gordon. With CM-at-risk, the construction manager now
can prequalify subs and "design-builders can propose
their own team," he adds.
Massachusetts does about $3 billion annually
in public construction. Healey estimates the reforms will
result in 10% savings, free up some stalled projects and significantly
improve quality and schedule performance. "The bill reaches
an appropriate balance between private-sector style efficiency
and public-sector transparencies and access," says Gordon.
Still to be determined is how much can be saved by allowing
design-build on buildings.
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