Title: CONTRACTING FOR GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE
1CONTRACTING FOR GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE
2- American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC)
is a national trade association of 5700
engineering companies employing over 200,000
people with offices worldwide.
3Introduction
- This presentation is based on the traditional
design, bid, build relationship, not design/build
or any other delivery system. - Trichotomy owner, design professional,
contractor. - Will not be covering LEED which applies to
buildingsbut only to structures other than
buildings. bridges, dams, highways, waste and
water treatment plants, sewer systems etc. - The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has a
contract for those who want a LEED certified
building.
4Why is a carefully prepared agreement important?
- The answer should be apparent from the number of
court cases on construction projects. - Knowing what is expected and what the parties are
counted on to do is most important. - Accepting responsibility is the ounce of
prevention and far less expensive than the pound
of cure that is required when misunderstandings
lead to litigation. - The chance of human error is greatly reduced when
one knows what others are relying on them to do.
5Overall Responsibilities of the Engineer and the
Contractor
- The engineer develops and documents the design
concept and their efforts are directed toward a
completed project. - The contractor implements the design and
constructs the project with efforts at how the
construction process is carried out. They are
responsible for the means, methods, techniques,
sequences and procedures.
6Owner Design Professional - Contractor
- In the traditional relationship the owner
contracts with the design professional and with
the contractor. - However, the design professional does not
contract with the contractor. - Still, many of the design professionals
responsibilities are mentioned in the owners
contract with the contractor.
7Business Used to Be Done on a HandshakeNo More
- The reason for a standard contract is, among
other things, to illustrate and explain the
nationally accepted customary division of
functions and responsibilities.
8Keys to delivering a green infrastructure
project.
- A committed project owner
- A dedicated project team
- Freedom in procurement and contracting mechanisms
- Realistic and achievable goals and objectives.
- Use Qualifications-Based Selection (QBS)
- Its the law (P.L. 92-582) for federally funded
projects when procuring the services of
architects or engineers - Most states have similar versions of the law for
state funded projects.
9A Quick Primer on QBS
- The owner issues a request for qualifications
(RFQ). - Professional entities or individuals respond to
the RFQ. - The owner reviews the qualifications based upon
past performance, technical competence, capacity
to accomplish the work and related factors. - The owner ranks the firms, with the
best-qualified firm ranked first, the second most
qualified second, and so on. - The owner commences negotiations with the
top-ranked firm to reach a mutual understanding
of the scope of work. - The parties negotiate a fair and reasonable price
for the services required. - If they cant the owner can move on to the second
most qualified firm. -
10Three Parts to a Standard Contract
- A Letter of Agreement
- An Exhibit that defines the Summary of
Services - An Exhibit that defines Terms and
Conditions of the Agreement sometimes called
General Conditions.
11Letter agreement
- Description of project
- Scope of services
- Compensation.
12Summary of services
- Basic services
- Sustainable considerations
13Basic services
- Takes you through the normal services offered by
an engineer phase by phase with a checklist of
what is included or not included.
14Sustainable Considerations
- A checklist of innovative ideas for a
sustainable project. - What follows is taken from Eco-Efficiency, De
Simone and Popoff, published by the MIT Press.
15Sustainable Considerations
- There are 7 categories of sustainable
considerations which themselves are broken down
further.
161. Reduce the Material and Intensity of Goods and
Services
- Reduce the consumption of water
- Use higher quality of materials to create less
waste at later stages of the project - Waste to be used on site
- Combine products and/or services to reduce
materials intensity - Reduce or eliminate packaging
172. Reduce the Energy Intensity of Goods and
Services
- Use renewable energy
- Use different materials to reduce energy
- Reuse waste heat for another process
- Monitor and control building energy usage
- Use more efficient transportation
183. Reduce Toxic Dispersion
- Eliminate or reduce toxic substances associated
with the project - Reduce waste and emissions during construction
- Find better ways to handle harmful materials
- Specify products with low toxic or harmful content
194. Enhance Material Recyclability
- Recycle, reuse or remanufacture waste
- Specify products with high recycled content
- Design infrastructure with consideration to
reuse, flexibility or recycling - Design infrastructure with consideration to ease
of deconstruction and material recovery
205. Maximize the Sustainable Use of Renewable
Resources
- Specify products made with resources certified as
sustainable - Make maximum use of passive heating and cooling
in design - Employ renewable energy sources during design
216. Extend Product Durability
- Incorporate durability considerations during
design - Design the infrastructure for ease of maintenance
- Design in a high degree of flexibility
227. Increase the Service Intensity of Products
- Find ways to sell services associated with the
project not just the product itself - Add more knowledge content to what is sold
- Leverage engineers knowledge to reduce clients
costs - Maintain a flexible scope of services to meet
increased stakeholder needs
23General Conditions
- Terms and Conditions found in many standard
contracts.
24Additional Services and Extra Services
- Additional are those which may or may not be
foreseen at the beginning of the design stage.
Examples Seismic analysis, future expansion,
traffic studies, wind analysis. - Extra services are those that arise out of
unforeseen circumstances. They can result from
many things e.g. a change in the magnitude of
the project, changes necessary from cost overruns
or from an extended construction schedule.
25Insurance
- There is an insurance provision that states the
engineer will maintain various forms of insurance
including professional liability, workers comp,
commercial general and automobile insurance.
26Guarantees and Warrantees
- Be careful of the language used when requiring
these of the engineer especially if they have to
guarantee facts over which the engineer has no
control and/or only partial knowledge. - In many instances giving such guarantees are not
included within the engineers professional
liability policy. -
27Points to Remember
- A carefully prepared agreement is your best
protection against subsequent legal problems. - The engineers efforts are directed toward a
completed project and the contractors efforts
are directed toward how the construction process
is carried out. - Keys to a successful project. See 8.
- QBS whether required by law in your state or
not it is the best way to procure engineering
services. - Sustainable considerations we view these as
goals and not requirements.
28- Thank You
- Edward Bajer
- Senior Director, Contracts and Risk Management
- American Council of Engineering Companies