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Report slams Kier over defect-riddled leisure centre

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Comments

  1. It is alarming that the construction sector seems to keep making the same mistakes, from the clients’ not challenging their consultants and advisors, to contractors not acquiring the requisite skills through to the 1st and 2nd tier supply chain.

    There is also a disconnect between the procurement method and the contracts adopted to ensure that the right contractor is appointed to deliver to the required standards.

    With the advent of more and more Design & Build contracts, clients need to be very clear on the outcomes they want and place more vigour in the early stages to ensure the design and product is right. It’s the clients product, so they should be instrumental through the whole process and appoint their own quality inspector/Clerk of Works to monitor any discrepancies as the work proceeds. This is the opportunity to correct issues before they become problems.

  2. As Preston points out, clients need to be more proactive in ensuring quality and fitness for purpose. Contractors are not going to improve on their own.

    Buildings don’t get to this stage in one brief moment, there will have been months of making-do and accepting work as ‘good-enough’ for now with a view to correcting at some later date. Then it just snowballs on from there…

  3. The Construction industry has already chased away 500,000 British builders who have emigrated because the bosses wanted cheaper labour, well you do get what you deserve. when will the construction industry ever learn, if you dont employ people who know what they are doing, you will never get a quality product. Management is too often just concerned with health and safety and ignores what is being produced, better procurement wont help either as no subcontractor will pay for its employees to be properly trained.

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