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Available on 4/26

Every contract includes three considerations: scope (extent, quality), compensation, and time of performance. In preparing construction contracts and performing construction contract administration, design professionals typically devote significant time to scope (via the drawings and specifications) and compensation (via construction cost estimates), but may devote considerably less effort to determining stipulated contract times and documenting delays and construction progress schedules. Time, as they say, is money—lots of money. Owners, design professionals, and construction managers as advisors who pay insufficient heed to this maxim court significant risk. .

This presentation will discuss the basics of: how stipulated construction contract times should be determined; types of construction delays and the risk allocations for each; how damages for late completion should be determined, specified, documented, and enforced; and what reviewers of construction progress schedules should, and should not, be evaluating and commenting on.

After attending this session, participants should be able to:

  • Explain considerations for determining stipulated contract times in construction contracts
  • Indicate the various types of construction delays and risk allocations for each
  • Discuss various types of financial damages for late completion of construction
  • Indicate key concepts for enforcing damages for delay during construction
  • Explain limits of design professionals’ and construction managers’ responsibilities for reviewing contractors’ construction progress schedules

Presenter: Kevin O’Beirne, PE, FCSI, CCS, CCCA, National Manager of Engineering Specifications, HDR

Course Type

Online Class

Delivery Type

On Demand, Online, Self-Paced

PDH Credit

1.5

Price (Member)

$229.00

Price (Non-Member)

$329.00

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