A Question of Values

Each year the Worshipful Company of Architects (the Architects’ Company) holds a public lecture, initially called the Milo Lecture after the first Company Clerk. The Masters of other Livery Companies are invited to attend. In my year as Master (2005-06) I gave the lecture myself. The subject was the tension within the profession between the roles of artist and of professional. The lecture was delivered at RIBA Headquarters where I was Vice President at the time.

My proposition to you today is that the British architectural profession is in a crisis of values. This arises from the conflicting values of their roles as professionals and as artists and has caused a loss of effectiveness and of worth to society. The issues have become clearer recently and a number of opportunities are evident for architects to regain a stronger position, becoming more valuable to society and themselves. This analysis flows partly from two reports which I wrote or commissioned: Be Valuable, a guide to creating value in the built environment, published by Constructing Excellence in November 2005 (1), and Constructive Change, a report to the RIBA in December 2005 by Bob White, chief executive of Constructing Excellence(2). It has also been influenced by seminal new books by N. J. Habraken, Palladio’s Children (3) and Nicholas Ray, Architecture and its ethical dilemmas (4).

I also saw the rise of the ‘signature architect’ and their journalist fellow­-travellers, pushing the model of the architect as, first and foremost, an artist. I saw architecture become the most attractive choice of career in the built environment, creative and cool. I saw the 2005 Stirling Prize award as a moment of definition, when a media circus chose a work of art as the winner, one more suited to the Turner Prize than to a professional accolade for that most practical art of architecture.


What is the value of architecture?

When I say there is a crisis of values, I mean that disparate value systems are at war, both within and around the architect’s world. Judgements of value, including how much money the work of architects is worth, stem from these various values. We often see correspondence from protagonists of one set of values arguing with another whose values are clearly quite different.

Consider the following pairs of statements:

Architects feel marginalised.  Architects are arrogant

Most buildings never see the hand of an architect.  Architects earn 3% of all UK construction spend.

Architects are poorly rewarded.  Architects create enormous value.

Society seems not to value architecture.  Public interest in architecture is at a high.

Clients won’t give work to new or small firms.  There is more work than ever before.

Architectural education is splendid.  Architects’ training is poor.

Clients won’t let architects lead anymore.  Architects have lost their leadership skills.

Architects are not part of the construction industry.  Architects are a key part of the industry.

Architects serve society.  Architects are concerned only about the opinions of other architects.

Architects are artists.  Architects are professionals

A few recent quotations add flavour:


“Architects design most hotels. Our guests designed ours”
Marriott advertisement.

“Many architects will be concerned that client centred
practice will mean that they will no longer be able to design interesting buildings”
Book review by John L. Heintz in the Architectural Review

“Originality and innovative potential are more important than the actuality of its performance”
Zaha Hadid in the Harvard Design Magazine

“By exaggerating the importance of design and the need for architects to remain outside the integrated industry, they (CABE) are sabotaging the modernisation of the construction process”
Colin Harding in Building Magazine



A brief history of architects

 

The nub of these comments is a perception of the retreat of architects from the 19th and 20th century professional role towards their older role as artists. Professionals are expected to work for the good of their clients and society; artists answer to themselves and their peers and seek patrons rather than clients or customers.

 

The artist model of the architect is a renaissance one, defined by Alberti and Palladio. Before that we know of some master masons, but in the renaissance the architect emerged alongside painters and sculptors as the practitioner of what they called ‘the mother of the arts’. Only the rich and powerful could commission architects and kings were their logical patrons. Only a fraction of a percent of all buildings was designed by architects however. The vernacular ‘field’, as Habraken calls it, rolled on along age­old patterns by designer/craftsman/builders. Craftsmen ruled both high and low building, their huge skills with materials taking both novel and conventional ideas to fruition.

 

In the eighteenth century a new kind of client emerged, the bourgeoisie. Where aristocrats had had no problem talking to their minions, the middle class sought to speak only to gentlemen like themselves. Architects began to work for the bourgeois by distancing themselves from the trade/craft background and in 1837 they defined
architecture as a profession by founding the RIBA. An ethical profession, separate from trade interests, emerged. It gradually developed the idea that all other professions were following, that of universal service. All building would benefit from the architect’s services in bringing order and good taste to bear. Bernard Shaw remarked that professions were a conspiracy against the laity, and indeed the professions prospered by providing guidance to worlds which they themselves had made arcane. In the mid­-twentieth century the UK architectural profession became strongly influenced by modern art on the one hand and by the public service ethos on the other. New, abstract forms took over from historicism and new social models defined an utopia in which the architect designed everything, the formal and the field. Pevsner, the author of so much of the post­war view, saw a distinction between architecture and the mass of ordinary construction, defining Lincoln Cathedral as architecture and a bicycle shed as building. Britain’s architects however, attempted to design the entire spectrum as if it was all formal architecture. Professor Jeremy Till of Sheffield University thinks this is deluded: ‘Cities are moulded by all of us, by all the people who live there, not just by architects and planners. Architecture is just a contingent discipline to the other forces at work’ (5).

 

This new world was a designer’s world and had no place for the maker as co-creator. Whereas earlier architects worked closely with their craftsmen, the move to new technology and materials destroyed the craft knowledge base. New technology had to be understood theoretically and designers needed to specify everything to the makers. The UK class system was especially prone to this polarisation of white and blue collar roles. ‘Form following Function’ gave a logic to this need for architects to define not only how buildings served their occupants but also how they were to be made, in detail. Architects chose and developed building products in the pre 1970 world, and they selected suppliers to put in the building contract.

 

Yet at the same time as architects claimed to design everything they were in long­term retreat from control of the process. The separation from constructors in the early nineteenth century was but the first step away from a comprehensive role. The steps away continued and ran far deeper than in other countries. Quantity surveyors inserted themselves into the tendering process in the mid 19th century, assisting the comparability of bids. They eventually flowered into the managing discipline, often appointed first. Civil engineers moved into building design to provide the frames and foundations that ambitious architects began to need. Services engineers came out of the heating, ventilating and electrical trades. At any point where the architect needed to calculate or manage, they seemed happier to step aside for a less intuitive group to
bring in professionalism.

 

Architects invented town planning; indeed I have a degree in it. Then we lost it in the 1970’s as ‘pure planners’ redefined the subject as being more than design­-based. Interior designers came out of art-­school furniture design to seize space-­planning, fitout and finishes, all expressions of the occupier’s world rather than of the architect’s. Lighting designers became electrical rather than architectural in background. Landscape architects, increasingly working as masterplanners, took important ground. None of these separations occurred in Germany for example, where architects do planning, landscape, interiors and lighting happily.

 

Big­time retreat started in the 1970s with the legally­led loss of the quasi­judicial role between client and contractor. At the same time the powers of the architect to nominate selected specialists and suppliers into the contract were suppressed, both in the interest of containing and clarifying client risk. Risk management, as we now call it, intensified as project managers replaced architects at the top of the food chain. Architects let it happen by neglecting the management side of their work. It was getting increasingly taxing and did not appeal to the profession’s idea of itself.

 

Then the architects’ grip on technology slipped. Construction technology advanced in the last 25 year largely through R&D by manufacturers, not through architects. Increasingly the architect, and indeed the consulting engineer, needed to let the maker of the system: lifts, sprinkler, controls, cladding, design the response to the specification then pass a warranty to the professional so that the consultants could continue to deliver ‘design responsibility’ to their clients. American architects never had to front this charade. They replaced the craft tradition with the maker as co­ designer from the start. The maker provides the US building owner with an insurance­ backed guarantee that the element meets the architect’s performance specification.

 

In architects’ offices the role of technological mastery was gradually delegated to an order of architectural technicians who founded their own professional body in the 1960s with the blessing of the RIBA, rather than forming a group within the profession. It became the Chartered Institute of Architectural Technologists in 2005. There is a collaborative agreement between the RIBA and CIAT, but they are separate now. Meanwhile, enterprising engineers had set up as ‘façade engineers’, to help architects specify the cladding that they wanted but could not design.

 

Last, but by no means least, the founding tradition of direct employment of the architect by the client was attacked. In the 1990s the rise of design­build accelerated. Used before that for utilitarian ‘field’ buildings alone, the contractor –led approach was praised by customers as inherently better because managerially integrated. By 1998 and the Egan report (6) it had become government policy to buy buildings on a single­responsibility basis, with the architect hired by the builder to ensure that the client has no risk from any gap between design and construction. The Private Finance Initiative also uses integrated teams inherently. Contractors found managing architects ‘like herding cats’, as Peter Druker put it about managing professionals. The role of ‘design manager’ emerged, invading the task of coordinating architect, engineers, cost consultant and other specialists with the contractor, a role the architect used to play as a matter of course.

 


Artist or professional? The education issue.

In 1958 the profession decided at the Oxford Conference that all aspiring architects should do a five-year degree at university. This decision came at a time when only two and a half percent of young people went to university and it was a powerful play for the high ground by an idealistic discipline. It also, however, kept architects close to the client class. The presumption was that the developing theory of modern architecture and town planning would blossom in a research-based teaching environment, replacing the haphazard training gained by articled pupils in offices. For a while all went well as most teachers and professors were also practitioners. Building science and construction were taught alongside history. Projects in design studio needed to be buildable.

But it didn’t last. By the 1970s practice was more active and combining teaching with it, as is still the norm in Germany, became rare. Those that could practice did so; those who remained aloof taught the subject and distaste for practice, as commercially compromised, became common in schools. A theoretical world developed there, emphasising the art content of the subject as it has far more academic depth and respectability to it. Research into how buildings work largely disappeared and indeed at the last Research Assessment Exercise, whilst it was admittedly mishandled, no school of architecture was recognised for research excellence.

The students of this art-architecture are highly creative and the subject is a big draw compared to the dullness of teaching in engineering and construction departments. But students see the subject as about star designers working alone, with iconic building as their goal. They are rarely taught the industry context, civics, construction or practice subjects. The end of the Modern Movement in architecture in the 1970s blew away the moral and technological drivers of the earlier decades and into the vacuum moved theories with an art or literature basis. Education became defined as ‘not training’, since the mere accumulation of practical knowledge was neither seen as opening the mind, nor as lasting long. Training could follow once in practice. Today’s buildings are often formally fabulous because of this trend, but they are not necessarily effective or professionally responsible. Sustainability, for example, is not an attractive source of design inspiration to all because it is thought to produce worthy but dull buildings, just as being client­oriented is thought to. The opinion of other architects, rather than that of clients or society, dominates the sense of worth of many. Our subculture has become introverted and dysfunctional. The flame of professional responsibility is not out and it often kindles as students take to the real world. But spending five years to acquire ‘educated incapacity’, as Daniel Bell described his overeducated Harvard colleagues, is wasteful. Rather we should be aiming to be Donald Schon’s ‘Reflective Practitioner’ (7), able to see patterns and make good judgements from the fragments of evidence available. The onset of the student debt regime this year, bringing architectural students the possibility of a debt burden three times their starting salary at graduation, will destroy this ‘five years in the sandpit’ approach.

It is now RIBA Policy to swing the pendulum back to an education based on combined academic and practice­-based activity. It is very likely that, for financial reasons, students will do a three year first degree, then move into practice for the remainder of their training. This will be a challenge to practices, but there could be a gain for professionalism, with practice and academic experience mixed and real world skills learned by using them. A ‘College of Architecture’ might emerge, parallel to the legal world’s concentrated finishing course. Architectural graduates may choose to fan out into specialisms, especially the in­-demand urban and sustainability skills, but also to go into construction, product and system design, management and facility consulting. Non­-cognate students may cross into architecture at masters’ level, a trend that has worked well in the USA. The definition of an architect will become much harder as the general-­practice, chartered architect will be surrounded by hybrid forms.


The shape of the future.

 

What I hope will happen is that the profession will strike a new balance between its artistic and professional heritages. It should not be an either/or choice but one where a ‘broad church’ of talents covers society’s needs, especially through teamwork. The ideal architect for the twenty-­first century is a skilled knowledge worker who brings creativity, insight and ethical values to the meeting of customer and society requirements. The architect’s is still the best skill set to act as the focus and holder of the big picture, capturing requirements and proposing solutions with an eye to the interests of all stakeholders. The ethics of artistic integrity need to be cross-fertilised with the ethics of professional responsibility and accountability.

 

What we need to develop is a more multi­dimensional concept of quality than we currently tend to use. The dominance of visual aesthetics in the definition of quality by architects has led to communication failures between the public and profession. Clients, users and the public value building which serve their needs and inspire them, in their terms, as working assets rather than as artefacts. These practical and adaptable structures are the buildings which are long-lived whilst once­-fashionable but overly­ precious buildings fall into neglect (8)
.

I have been working on the concept of value for Constructing Excellence, recently publishing ‘Be Valuable, a guide to creating value in the built environment.’ The report, from a high­-powered task group, proposed that ‘value­-seeking’ rather than cost-­control should become the central behaviour of the industry. It also accepted that perception of value is the product of values and hence personal to the stakeholder. For any project, the pattern of stakeholder values needs to be identified and a ‘value proposition’ agreed which satisfies stakeholders. Quality is then definable as that which delivers value, either by enabling the goals of the stakeholders or by reducing the lifetime cost of the facility; ideally by doing both together, the concept of ‘lean thinking’ (9)

Buildings typically cost three times as much over their lives to run and maintain as they do to design and build. They support, on average, thirty times their cost in occupier value­-added. Good design optimises initial investment to improve those ratios. A good hospital is a therapeutic device, speeding recovery. Indeed research (10) has demonstrated good design paying for itself by reducing annual patient care costs by more than the charge for the premises. A good office building enables its users to outperform rivals by stimulating occupier health, effectiveness, interaction and self­-esteem whilst minimising cost in use.

 

Architects need to build databanks of how buildings actually perform for occupiers and communities, as a source for consultancy skill in brief-making and design. The present vacuum of knowledge need filling through university and practitioner research. Concentrating on ‘the end and the beginning’ will give architects the knowledge to make provable proposals with confidence, rather than living on the optimistic assertions of today. The concept of ‘Soft Landings’, the design and build team staying with the new building during its shakedown cruise, to help the occupiers and facility managers bed down but also to learn how their ideas worked, is an excellent one (11).

 

The sustainability agenda is a huge opportunity for architects to regain relevance and respect in the community. Sustainability is triple-­decked, requiring economic, social and environmental success. Economic performance will flow from the focus just described. Social performance is a matter of perceiving and advocating community interests beyond those of the project paymaster, but also in the paymaster’s interest in gaining permission and corporate responsibility points. Environmental viability is an increasingly crucial test which may change building design radically. Yet proposals have to be economically affordable and socially inclusive or they are not going to survive. Architects have always cared about social and environmental matters generally, but they have not backed their concern with depth of knowledge or inclusion of expert contributors, hence the frequent social failures of redevelopment and the shallowness of much ‘sustainable’ building. 10

 

Architects working to create value need to switch their reward concept to one based on the value created. Fees related to costs divide clients’ and architect’s interests and help to depress architects’ income as well as keeping the focus on costs rather than on value. Relevant design effort can release many times its cost in performance raised or building lifetime cost lowered. Almost by definition there can be no innovation without investment in time beyond the norm. It will not be an easy concept and its methods will vary by sector, but a profession which shares an interest in the value margin with its clients will be far more welcome and well rewarded. Mr Micawber’s principles can be restated in ‘Be Valuable’ terms in Prof Hennes de Ridder’s diagram which shows projects aiming for a healthy margin of perceived value above price paid and another clear margin between price paid and the cost of supply (2 – p44).

 

The profession should expect to reposition itself further upstream in the process than today. The majority of fee income is now generated at and after Stage E, the detailed design stage of the RIBA Plan of Work. Relatively little flows from Stages A and B, or before them, those project definition and feasibility areas where arguably we add most value and could add more. It will become important for value delivery that architects become more like business consultants to clients on how best to define their needs. Simultaneously, we can expect to lose much of the downstream role to a combination of supplier design, use of standard products and third world outsourcing. It is in the client’s interest for constructors to enter the team earlier and take responsibility for meeting the specification. It is also in the client’s interest to use as much generic product as possible in meeting that specification. Increasingly, both production information and product design will flow from Asia, the future dominant market for building demand. Low cost, high quality components are as likely to be globally traded as appliances or cars are and will drive down the cost of building here. <

 

The logical position of the architect is as the customer’s value champion, defining, proposing and defending the value proposition through the process of creation, and indeed through the life cycle. ICT will be a core tool for doing this. Stronger capture of requirements, coupled with better simulation of proposals, will increase the power and acceptability of design and with it customer satisfaction. Multi­dimensional building information modelling (BIM) will then act as the shared resource of client, design team, constructors and facility managers over the life cycle. Architects should seek to be the intellectual property holders, the masters of the model for the team, coordinating all contributions so that the building can be made without surprises on site (worth 10% of total cost today) and later maintained and operated from the database. Indeed buildings will be increasingly self­aware, referring to their mental model. They will be manufactured, erected and serviced by robots and actively self­ managing. They will produce performance reports to feed the consultancy skills of their authors and justify their performance bonuses. Artificial intelligence is the knowledge workers’ power­-assistance, saving much of the ‘grunt work’ and enabling much higher levels of aspiration. Frank Gehry’s astonishing buildings are testament to the power of ICT even now, making the ‘impossible’ possible.

 

Whether architects are working directly for clients or indirectly as members of a contractor’s team, our focus on client need will be the key to our relevance and value to everyone. Contractors have a long road to travel to achieve customer focus as they have always concentrated on delivery, not the thing delivered. Architects are the natural compliment to that, providing the customer, user and community interface which the supply team needs, whilst collaborating closely and early with the suppliers on how identified needs are to be met. We need to be the ‘Greeks’ to their ‘Romans’, the civilising influence to their energy and appetite for risks. We carry the ethics card, concentrating on doing the right thing rather than just on doing things right. But to hold that position, we have to know more, through research, about the value that we champion. What was, for example, the benefit to the BBC of the coffee break points cut out of Richard MacCormac’s Portland Place HQ, compared to the cost saved?

 

Contractor-architect synergy seems to me to work best when an architect is a senior part of the contractor’s organisation, relating them to the architects hired.
 
So, overall, where should the architectural profession go in the next decade?

 

  • It should hitch its wagon firmly to the concept of sustainable value, economic, social and environmental
  • It should, through research, deepen its knowledge of how buildings work and what adds or destroys value of all kinds
  • It should move upstream in the process, consulting to clients on what their needs are and how best to meet them
  • It should move its education and training concept towards a partnership of academic and practice-based learning, coupled with the rebirth of practical research
  • It should engage strongly with the construction, property and facility management industries and professions, learning from them and bringing ideas to them
  • It should be the model-holder in ICT terms, master of the virtual building on behalf of customers, supply team and occupiers, and as a source of feedback for the profession
  • It should develop ways to be rewarded which are linked to value created, not construction cost. That cost will fall as Asia provides more of the inputs. Our economic value will rise as we liberate value for customers and fellow team members.

 

And what of the artist role? Is my message that the professional role must become completely dominant? No, without the artistic side to architecture it becomes ‘surveying’, the professional service for property. Marshall McLuhan, the media thinker, predicted that as economic activity in the west becomes more focussed on cultural products, so the world we occupy would become seen as one big artwork. Increasingly, there is an expectation of quality and style in our environment and people travel the world to experience the best of it. There is indeed a risk that the artistic dimension will be seen as the province of artists or designers adding things to architects’ aesthetically banal work. Sculptor Thomas Heatherwick and fashion designer Wayne Hemingway are both actively ‘doing buildings’. This is evidence of the values gap we face. Consumers want more beauty and resonance (in their terms) in their environment than many architects give them.

How then shall we balance the professional and artistic genes in our heritage? I suggest three ways:

  • Teamwork. Many of the most effective architectural firms are partnerships between opposites. An artistically-­driven architect in partnership with a professionally­focussed one will outperform a firm of like­minded people. Developers frequently team creative and executive practices to get this effect.
  • Positioning. The spectrum of client aspiration ranges from cathedrals to bicycle sheds, with much of the present building programme squarely in the middle of the spectrum, where professionalism is expected and any art is welcome but not to frighten the horses. Architects should pick their position and shape their response to it.
  • Synthesis. Creating practical artefacts with skill and artistry is called ‘craft’ in the world of the one-off, ‘design’ in the product sphere, and it is the values of the craft tradition, applied to design as well as to workmanship, that may bridge the gap to our stakeholders in many circumstances.

 

The great value of architects to the community lies in our generalist skills in a world of specialists and in our ability to see the big picture, empathise with stakeholders and imagine solutions to how we could live. These abilities come from artistic skills: informed intuition, pattern­recognition abilities and creativity. Our aptitude in crystallising the design need and the solution to a building ‘throws a six’ which enables the specialists to get started. We are then relied upon to coordinate everyone’s design input and to bring flair to the practical solution, to advocate for quality throughout the process and to inspire customers, co­consultants, and suppliers, as well as to convince the planning committee, an increasingly professional task list.
Architecture attracts very creative, ‘crossover’ talent, both artistic and technocratic in its mind set. We inhabit both of C.P.Snow’s two worlds of sciences and arts. We need to steer back to a balanced view of our role and how we prepare for it and thus be better able to reward and retain talent.

If we get our values right, the future of architects as artist-professionals
is bright, which would be good news for the quality of life of everyone.

Resources
What you get versus what you give to get it. Value means far more than cost, embracing all the benefits over time and all forms of impact on natural, social, human and manufactured capital.
  • Be Valuable: A guide to creating value in the built environment

    ‘Be Valuable’ is the report of a working group of ‘Be: collaborating for the built environment’. This ginger group, chaired by Richard, was the successor to the Reading Construction Forum and the Design-Build Foundation and is one of the earliest studies of the true value of built assets.

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  • A Question of Values

    Each year the Worshipful Company of Architects (the Architects’ Company) holds a public lecture, initially called the Milo Lecture after the first Company Clerk. The Masters of other Livery Companies are invited to attend. In my year as Master (2005-06) I gave the lecture myself. The subject was the tension within the profession between the roles of artist and of professional. The lecture was delivered at RIBA Headquarters where I was Vice President at the time.

    Continue Reading
  • The Well Advised Client: improving project effectiveness through strategic advice.

    The success of any construction project depends on the client. However good the rest of the team is, the knowledge, strength and wisdom of the client are decisive for the achievement of goals. This is well evidenced by the difference between the results achieved by ‘professional clients’: developers, large companies and some universities, and those produced by clients who do not build continuously or have standing, expert teams. This group are by far the majority however. How are they to get what they need from the construction industry?

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  • The Value Agenda

    We all want to make our investments in building deliver the outcomes we seek. Yet for many clients there is not sufficient time or resource to begin the project on a sound basis. Too many projects discover what they should really be like after they are well on the way, with inevitable effects on cost and time and many disappointments as goals are missed. The importance of starting well cannot be over emphasised.

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  • Towards Value-based Procurement

    I return to this topic again as it advances continuously. Government struggles with its procurement policy as forces pull in opposite directions. On the one hand, established practice is to seek lowest capital cost for design and construction in order to spread available resources over the most constituencies possible. On the other hand, there is growing awareness that processes seeking lowest first cost tend to produce poor value. Value is not just price, but a more complex concept embodying benefits and costs created for stakeholders over the life of an asset. These benefits can be economic, but also social and environmental. Lowest first cost can be at the expense of whole-life cost as so-called ‘value engineering’ downgrades specification to hit Capex targets or make more profit than is possible at the bid price. Low capital cost can also be at the expense of environmental performance standards, with building regulations still being a low bar to cross and nowhere near ‘Net-Zero’. Social value is increasingly a focus in procurement, defined as benefit to the community in which a development is planned, creating local jobs, skills and amenities.

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  • The size of the Built Environment sector

    The scale of the construction industry is regularly understated in statistics as they omit professional services, manufacturing, materials extraction, and embodied energy. The more important understatement is that construction is a narrow definition of the services providing our built environment. This is a blend of property, design, manufacturing, construction, and management services with an annual share of GDP of over 17%. Most recent RICS figures, before the distortions of 2020, suggest the following:

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An overriding theme has been the way that the built environment industry may change as new thinking takes hold. There have been many reviews pointing to its dysfunction, but limited success in reform. These are constructive thoughts.
  • Thinking About Building

    NEDO commissioned BDP to create a client guide to the procurement of design and construction, based on the NEDO research report ‘Faster Building for Industry’. It included a gameboard of options for assembling the team, together with a scoring approach to help choose an option. 

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  • The JCT Povey Lecture: Vision for the Industry

    Introduction

     

    On Wednesday, 29th October 2003 Richard Saxon CBE, Vice-President of the RIBA, Director of BDP and Chairman of Be gave the following lecture entitled ‘Vision for Industry (formerly known as construction)’ to invited guests of The Joint Contracts Tribunal at the Jarvis Hall, Royal Institute of British Architects.

     

    This lecture was the inaugural JCT Povey Lecture, an event by way of a public acknowledgement and tribute to Philip Povey, who served the JCT for over fifty years.

     

    The JCT Povey Lecture is to be an annual event at which an eminent person will be invited to give his/her thoughts on significant matters that are relevant to the construction and property industry.

     

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  • Integrated Project Delivery: the new Plan of Work

    The American architectural profession has discovered Integrated Project Delivery (IPD) and is enthused by it. At the recent AIA Convention in Boston there were numerous meetings about it and its closely related subject, Building Information Modelling (BIM). The AIA has just published its guidance on IPD at www.aia.org/ipdg

     

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  • Is Offsite Construction the Answer?

    The construction industry is heading for the buffers. Capacity is draining out as skilled tradesmen retire and few enter as apprentices. The go-to supply of EU migrant tradesmen is likely to be restricted soon and is already less interested as the pound falls. Construction quality is declining in the housebuilding world. Mark Farmer’s message: Modernise or Die, is clear that a major move to offsite construction is needed to keep the industry from decline. The core problem is low productivity growth in construction, globally under 1% per annum when manufacturing achieves 3.6%. There are many causes of this, but the making of buildings on site, in all weathers, is one of them.

     

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  • Re-Integration

    The collapse of Carillion is probably another nail in the coffin of the current UK model of main contracting where virtually all the trade work is subcontracted. Over fifty years in the industry, I have seen the change from traditional contractors with their main trades in-house to the current, unsustainable pattern. The vertically integrated contractor was brought down by recurrent business cycles which punish employers. Once the idea spread that trade specialists could be hired in just when needed, taking them off the contractor’s books, that approach spread fast. Tier Two firms could be left with the work of recruiting and training people, innovating in their specialism and managing the risk handed down to them. They could also provide working capital to the main contractor by accepting slow payment for their work. Most of the business cycle impact became ‘subcontracted out’. In practice, with Tier Two firms bidding at low margins to win work from the Tier One contractor, the scope for innovation and proper training was driven out. One of the stubborn failures of the industry since this pattern became the norm has been the lack of any productivity growth. Scratch teams, built up per project, learn nothing from experience and waste considerable resources in the procurement process. The critique of the method reads:

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  • Lucky 13?

    Construction is many industries within one classification. It stretches from the mammoth to the minute, from infrastructure work like HS2 to household repair tasks. Any critique of construction therefore needs to recognise the part of the industry to which it refers. The statistical classification of the industry also fails to include its clients and consultants, essential parts of the cultural and economic system of the built environment. All that having been said, new initiatives at one end of the scale spectrum could create momentum for change across much of the industry.

     

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  • Professional Futures

    Every part of the construction industry is challenged by rapidly evolving threats: stagnant productivity, falling human resources, failing business models, climate change, globalisation, advancing computer power, to name some of them. Most attention is paid to the plight of contractors and specialists, but the world of consultancy also faces these same issues. Professionals additionally face falling credibility and authority as respect for expertise declines. Their professional institutions seem powerless to communicate the value of the professional contribution to the public, to clients and to government.
     

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  • The Question of Quality

    When a construction client signs a contract to deliver a project, they usually have three targets in mind: to deliver the required facility on budget, on time and to required quality. Cost and Time have proved relatively manageable, with objective evidence and increasingly clever tools with which to manage. Quality has never been so simple. There is a perceived degree of subjectivity about it and it is quite hard to monitor the progress of work to ensure that all standards are being maintained. The result has been that whenever there is pressure on cost or time, it’s usually quality that suffers. Value Engineering has become an ironic term as it usually means cost reduction by reducing the quality that delivers required value.

     

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  • Construction: service or product?

    The Office for National Statistics lists the construction industry as part of the service sector. This makes some sense in that we provide bespoke facilities to customers rather like a restaurant provides meals. However, our output is not a transient meal but delivers a very concrete asset which needs looking after for its whole life, a service we do not provide except reactively. We treat our output like a product, leaving the buyer to look after it. Owners are not often expert at this, generating waste and depreciation. Our landlord and tenant legislation dumps repair and maintenance responsibility on unskilled tenants, charging them to restore the property to its original state on departure or pay ‘dilapidations’.

     

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  • Construction’s new Playbook

    You may not know that I have been a long-time fan of American Football. The game is sometimes called ‘violent chess’ as it’s based on pre-planned ‘plays’ by one side’s offence team and the other’s defence team. The plays are radioed into the quarterback, the leader of the offence, by a coach on the side-line and the whole team must remember the moves implied by the coded name of the play, then execute it flawlessly. All the team’s plays are set down in their playbook, a secret document that team members must learn by heart and practice continuously. New plays are devised all the time too. No wonder the game originated in colleges.

     

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  • Changing our Industry: three Horizons, four Capitals

    A generation has passed since the excitement of the 1990s as first Latham and then Egan called for radical change in the construction industry. Initiatives seemed to pour out of both government and the industry, yet here we are still with an industry which seems much the same, racked by cost pressures, defensive, risky, unsustainable and unattractive to the workforce that it needs. We seem to live in Groundhog Day, repeating the traditional process with scratch teams, collaborating weakly and producing poor results.

     

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Here are articles covering the impact of concern for the natural environment and for societal matters in the creation of built environment. The term ESG has been used to embrace these issues, but I leave the Governance subject to others.
  • High Street Schools

    Britain is building or rebuilding all its thousands of primary and secondary schools to fit them for today’s needs. Many new schools are being founded, especially in areas of population growth. The location and design of these schools is not however being considered as part of the drive to more sustainable communities. This article looks at what could and should be happening.

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  • Valuing Sustainability

    Sustainability is the greatest challenge faced by our civilisation, in that, as other speakers in this distinguished series have said, and as Sir Nicholas Stern’s report has recently demonstrated, its current trajectory cannot be indefinitely sustained, economically, environmentally or socially. The transition to a sustainable path is however beset by barriers, of which the most entrenched is the perception that long-term environmental sustainability, the most urgent issue, is not achievable without short-term economic loss and politically unacceptable lifestyle change. Whilst the triple-bottom-line concept of Sustainability implies that economic and social sustainability cannot exist without environmental sustainability, the reverse is also true. We cannot hope to achieve a sustainable environment unless we can afford it, through continuing economic success and increasing social equity across the planet. This suggests a concentration on seeking low-cost techniques to reduce emissions and on increasing our economic ability to fund less affordable methods.

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  • Just the Facts: article on Sustainable Energy – without the hot air, by David J C MacKay

    “Have you read David MacKay’s book? It’s great and so useful,” said one of the several fellow sustainability enthusiasts who pressed me to take it in. So, I did and it is. And I thought you should know about it too. It helps a lot with sorting the myths from the wishful thinking and the really good ideas.

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  • Going Soft

    We need to be harder on ourselves as an industry and admit that most of our new buildings reach the end of their defects liability period without ever delivering the performance that they promised. BREEAM ratings at design stage do not predict carbon emissions commensurate with the grading. Sometimes, the certificated building burns several times the expected energy consumption. And typically, we don’t go back to analyse the performance, nor the workability of the design for the purpose intended. We move on to the next project. Clients rarely complain, as their expectations were never high, nor clearly stated.

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  • Is a sustainable built environment possible?

    The Extinction Rebellion movement has certainly rekindled the awareness of everyone that climate change is real, and that drastic action is essential. But what can we in the built environment do differently other than the slow, incremental changes that are in train? Recent books point the way and give rise to some optimism.

     

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  • Australia sweeps Test series

    No, this isn’t about cricket. Its about learning from Australia how to deliver buildings that perform as specified. In October 2017 I wrote about the ‘Soft Landings’ concept as a way for designers and builders to incorporate facility management needs into their process and ensure that buildings perform properly. This tool is part of the Government’s version of BIM Level 2, but not widely understood or used beyond that. We remain a country with published aspirations to achieve high physical performance in buildings but with a woeful record of underachievement. Why is this?

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  • Might building performance become contractual?

    At present, building contracts are designed to manage the completion of a capital project on budget, on time and without defects, dealing with failures should they arise. The new situation, driven by concern for climate change and for occupant safety, is that buildings must also perform as promised, over time.

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  • Net Zero: harder than it looks

    The push to decarbonise the built environment by mid-century can be portrayed as simply going all-electric and relying on the grid to become carbon free. But that does not consider the difficulty of meeting the resultant electricity demand from net-zero sources. UK FIRES (ref) estimates that electricity demand by 2050, from industry, transport and buildings, would be double the level of potential net-zero supply if expected usage patterns duly emerge. Ramping up carbon-free power supply from all sources is happening at a good rate, but it is not credible that this growth rate can be raised much more in the next 29 years. Even generating green hydrogen as a fuel competes at peak hours with using more efficient carbon-free power directly.

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Information management is a current topic as digital technologies impact the way we plan, design, build, operate and manage built assets.
  • Growth Through BIM

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  • One Building or Two?

    The conventional client for a construction project has focussed on achieving success in getting their requirements delivered to quality, on time and on budget. It has been a capital project mind-set, measuring achievement over the period up to the final account. Those clients who own the building tend to change the accounting status and the leadership involved at the end of the capital phase, handing the facility manager, who is rarely involved before this point, a bundle of information from the contractor to help them start to set up the Operation and Maintenance system they will need. Those who sell the building on after completion and letting have even less interest in the life of their creation, passing responsibility to the investor and tenants to make the best of it.

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  • BIM for Construction Clients

    In 2016 the RIBA’s then-subsidiary, NBS, published Richard Saxon’s book, BIM for Construction Clients, to mark the start of the UK government mandate that government projects should use BIM. The book explains the advantages of BIM in client terms and provides case studies of pioneering projects. The content is based on the UK provisional standard PAS 1192 and the then-current concept of Level 2 BIM. In 2019 this standard was replaced by an international one, ISO 19650. This was founded on PAS 1192 but changed a lot of the language and some of the assumptions. Extensive guidance to the use of the ISO standard was then published as the UK BIM Framework. The book is therefore no longer a useful guide to current practice, though it does give a picture of the pioneering stage of UK BIM.

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  • Briefmaking for Better Information Management: adding information matters to the briefing process

    The architectural process starts with extracting the brief from the client and related stakeholders. Traditionally briefmaking has concentrated on the design requirements for the building, plus the time and cost issues to be met. Now we have a further dimension to manage, the information requirements which will enable the client and team to benefit from using digital Information Management (IM). This article offers an approach to gathering the information brief which fits onto the familiar matrix of briefmaking.

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  • The Digital Twin: why, what and how

    The built environment is officially regarded as an enabler of the economy and of our quality of life. By the ‘built environment’ I mean the complex of economic sectors which plan, regulate, develop, design and build, operate and maintain the physical fabric of our civilisation, its buildings and infrastructure. These sectors total between 15 and 20% of the total economy and the current government view is that the success of built environment investments should be measured by the outcomes they support for the economy and society.

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  • BIM and JCT Contracts.

    JCT is in favour of BIM. It can reduce risks and disputes whilst increasing effective collaboration on projects. But it does have to be applied with knowledge and skill. A new guidance document from JCT attempts to fill a gap identified in the skills of clients and their advisers, moving us towards the goal of making BIM ‘business as usual’.

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  • Better Information Management

    Readers may be familiar with my interest in Building Information Modelling or BIM. Since the turn of the century, I have been involved with the concept, helping to spur the government to make it their policy to mandate its use. In 2012 I was commissioned to produce a report for what is now BEIS on ‘BIM for Growth’, the potential effect on economic growth of the uptake of BIM in the UK. I became ‘UK BIM Ambassador for Growth’ in 2012-13. A place on the Steering Committee of the BIM Task Group was also provided as it evolved what became BIM Level 2 and the PAS 1192 set of draft standards in 2013. British BIM shot forward and became the world leader as the government mandate arrived in 2016.

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  • Disappointed Party

    ISO 19650, the world standard for using BIM, is a great UK achievement. The guidance produced by the UK BIM Alliance on how to use the standard is also excellent, except for one area where it leaves me gasping, taking jargon to new depths of obscurity.

     

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  • Right First Time: a major payback from Better Information Management

    Construction project teams shoot themselves in the foot all the time. A minority of projects come in on or below cost and time targets. Errors cost them far more than the typical industry profit margin. The Get It Right Initiative (GIRI) (1), an industry group focussed on the error issue, reckons that 5% of project cost is directly down to mistakes, with 21% in total after indirect costs, unrecorded waste and latent defects are counted. The top ten causes of this mayhem are listed as:

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  • Information Management: What, Why and How

    You have heard of BIM, but what is IM or Information Management? And why has it replaced BIM as the focus of digital processes for the built environment? Thirdly, how do you use IM to deliver the desired outcomes?

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  • Taming The Tsunami

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    ‘Taming the Tsunami’ is the Deploi client guide to information management for projects and assets. 

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The idea of indoor courtyards and streets is over 200 years old. Richard wrote the two seminal books on this building type.
  • Book : Atrium Buildings – Development and Design

     
    During the 1970s Richard became interested in the newly revived concept of the atrium building, one where space is arranged around an indoor courtyard. Travels and research showed that the idea had a complex history and many influences. The 1983 book maps these influences and considers the technical challenges of designing stimulating and safe atrium buildings. The book was revised in 1986 for a second edition.

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  • Book : The Atrium Comes of Age

    The first book was in black and white only. Many spectacular atrium buildings were created in the 1980s and the second book provides colour images of the most important examples, grouped by building use. There is also a stronger historical background, updated fire safety advice and a gazetteer of the best examples worldwide. This book was also re-published in the US and Japan.

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photo: BDP
photo: BDP
photo: BDP
Royal Albert
Hall. BDP
2000
National Maritime
Museum. BDP
1999
From 1986 the City of London became the setting for much of Richard’s career.
2030
Channel Tunnel
terminal. BDP
1992
Taming The Tsunami
2023