InternatIonal fIndIngs
International jurisdictions and authorities have
recognised the dangers of the market failures
identified previously, and have developed, to
varying degrees, means for solving them.
- The United States National Council of
Architects Registration Boards (NCARB)
discusses these issues in the publication
Guidelines and Model Law/ Model
Regulations. Guideline V11 states: “VII.
Requiring that an architect be engaged
during the construction of a project
A. An owner who proceeds to have
constructed a project having as its
principal purpose human occupancy
or habitation and not exempted under
Section VI shall be deemed to be engaged
himself/herself in the practice of
architecture unless he/she has employed
an architect to perform at least minimum
construction contract administration
services, including (i) periodic site
visits, (ii) shop drawing review, and
(iii) reporting to the owner and building
official any violations of codes or
substantial deviations from the contract
documents which the architect observed.
B. It shall be the project design architect’s
obligation to report to the state board
and to the building official if he/she is
not engaged to provide construction
contract administration services
described in Paragraph A.”
- In the United Kingdom, the Royal Institute
of British Architects’ Statement on Design
for Fire Safety, which was commissioned as
a consequence of the Grenfell Tower disaster,
identified the following concerns about the
procurement regime for buildings in the UK:
“Developments in building procurement
approaches which mean that the Lead
Designer (architect or engineer) is
no longer responsible for oversight
of the design and the specification of
materials and products from inception
to completion of the project, with design
responsibility often transferred to the
contractor and sub-contractors, and no
single point of responsibility.”
“The virtual disappearance of the role
of the clerk of works or site architect
and the loss of independent oversight
of construction and workmanship on
behalf of the client.”
ProPosed legIslatIve reform
The market failures described earlier can only
be overcome by statutory controls, requiring
continuous accountability for design, technical
documentation and inspection through the
building process from inception to completion
- similar to the principle of “continuity of care”
espoused by certain health professions.
Hence, it is suggested that the simplest and
most effective way for Australian jurisdictions
to address this market failure is to modify
existing legislation; namely, to ensure that
when a project involves the construction of
Class 2, 3, 5 and 9 buildings, that an architect
of account be appointed to provide a full design,
technical working documentation and contract
administration services.
The architect’s responsibilities should
include (i) periodic site visits, (ii) shop
drawing review, and (iii) reporting any
violations of codes or substantial deviations
from the contract documents to the owner
and the relevant authority.
Cost of reform
The proposed reform would not generate
any discernible additional cost to the
construction industry. Design, technical
working documentation, contract administration
and inspection services are already inherent
components of the cost of a building, and the
financial benefits of avoiding construction
accidents contribute to a compelling argument.
It is probable that the cost of engaging a single,
competitively appointed, professionally qualified
provider would be less costly than contracting a
series of disparate service providers.
The proposed reform
would not generate any
discernible additional cost to
the construction industry.
Architecture & design /
PlaCes
/ jul-sep 2019
4
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