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E-grāmata: Managing Design: Conversations, Project Controls, and Best Practices for Commercial Design and Construction Projects

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Apr-2019
  • Izdevniecība: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781119562009
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Apr-2019
  • Izdevniecība: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781119562009
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Offers state-of-the-art principles and strategies gleaned from high-profile projects to help readers manage design

This guide to managing design process within the commercial design and construction industry addresses a growing pain point in an industry where collaborative approaches to project delivery are outpacing the way professionals work. It synthesizes issues by investigating the “why,” “how,” and “who” of the discipline of managing design, and gives the “what” and “when” to apply the solutions given various project delivery and contracting methods. The book features candid interviews with over 40 industry leaders—architects, engineers, contractors, owners, educators, technology evangelists, and authors—which present a broad look at current issues and offer paths to future collaboration and change.

Managing Design: Conversations, Project Controls and Best Practices for Commercial Design and Construction Projects is a self-help book for design and construction that provides aninsider’s look at the mysteries of managing design for yourself, team, firm and future. It tackles client empathy; firm culture; owner leadership; design and budgets; dealing with engineers, consultants, and contractors; contracts; team assembly; and much more. 

  • Features eye-opening interviews with 40 industry luminaries
  • Exposes issues and poses solutions to longstanding industry ills
  • Offers a project design controls framework and toolset for immediate application and action
  • Includes best practice tips, process diagrams, and comparative analytical tables to support the text

Written in a relatable style, Managing Design: Conversations, Project Controls and Best Practices for Commercial Design and Construction Projects is a welcome resource for owners, contractors, and designers in search of better ways to work together.

Managing Design blends practical advice from the author's five decades in architecture and construction with wisdom from more than three dozen luminaries in the design, delivery, ownership and operation of the built environment. The result is an extraordinary guide to integrating practice across disciplines.”

—Bob Fisher, Editor-In-Chief, Design Intelligence

Managing Design peers into the soul of a contentious industry as it grapples with change—a deep dive into the design and construction process in the words of those doing the work. I enjoyed the engineers and contractors’ pleas to be made parties to design process early on. The questions—as interesting as the answers—are both here in this book.”

—Richard Korman, Deputy Editor, Engineering News Record

Managing Design hits many of the design and construction industry’s ills head-on with insightful interviews by new and established leaders and real-world tactics on creating better teams, better communications between players, and—most vitally—better project results.”

—Rebecca W. E. Edmunds, AIA, Editor, Author and President, r4 llc

Preface xiii
Foreword xvii
Charles Thomsen
Randy Deutsch
Introduction xxiii
Premise
Mission
Methods
Issues
Context
Themes
Movement
PART 1 Perspectives
1(210)
Chapter 1 The Interviews
3(6)
Chapter 2 Client Empathy: Listening, Collaboration, and Expertise
9(10)
Chuck Thomsen
Past Chairman
Chapter 3 Owner Leadership: Programs, Users, and Talking
19(14)
Barbara White Bryson
John Moebes
Arthur E. Frazier
Chapter 4 Building Learning Organizations: Knowledge and Research
33(18)
James P. Cramer
Randy Deutsch
Chapter 5 Firm Culture: Management and Attitudes
51(20)
Scott Simpson
Thompson Penney
Agatha Kessler
Chapter 6 Strategy: Early Questions, Planning Horizons, and Socialization
71(20)
Phil Bernstein
Margaret Gilchrist Serrato
David Gilmore
Chapter 7 Process: Lean Scheduling -- Agile and Efficient
91(10)
Bruce Cousins
Chad Roberson
Chapter 8 Collaborators: Performative Design (Better Together)
101(16)
Marc L'ltalien
Bob Carnegie
Houston Matthew Dumich
Chapter 9 Design and Budgets: Architect/Contractor Collaboration and Trust
117(12)
Jeffrey Paine
Peter Styx
Chapter 10 Art and Architecture: Design Leadership and Conviction
129(10)
Phil Freelon
Allison Grace Williams
Chapter 11 Engineers and The Consultant's Mindset: Leading From Behind
139(12)
Daniel Nail
Kurt Swensson
Chapter 12 Contractors: Risk and Design Assist Expertise
151(24)
John Rapaport
John Lord
David Scognamiglio
Jeremy Moskowitz
Don Davidson
Jeff Giglio
Wayne Wadsworth
Jon Lewis
Chapter 13 Technology: Leveraging Data
175(16)
Aral Wolford
Casey Robb
Josh Kanner
Chapter 14 Entrepreneurship: Vertical Integration and Value Propositions
191(10)
Scott Marble
William H. Harrison Chair
David Fano
Chapter 15 Change Agents: Advocacy Equity, and Sustainability
201(10)
Simon Joaquin Clopton
Emily Grandstaff-Rice
PART 2 Project Design Controls: A Framework for Balance, Change, ana Action
211(122)
Chapter 16 Project Design Controls: A Framework for Balance, Change, and Action
Origins: Looking and Seeing, Borrowing and Common Sense
Navigation Adoption: Internalization, Sharing
Toolmaking: What Gets Measured Gets Done
Boundaries, Limits Constraints: Enemies or Friends?
The Litmus Test: Project Design Controls
213(10)
Chapter 17 Level 0: Subsurface (Contractual/Forming)
Project Design Controls
Supporting Collaboration
Other Resources
223(6)
Chapter 18 Level 1: Foundation (Planning/Organizing)
Goals and Objectives
Roles and Responsibilities
Communication Protocols
BIMADC/Digital Infrastructure
Programming, Research
Project Analysis Kickoff Meeting
Project Definition Package (PDP)
229(12)
Chapter 19 Level 2: Structure (Measuring/Baseline)
Tangible, Measurable Project Design Controls: The "Structural" Baseline
241(22)
Chapter 20 Level 3: Systems (Relating/Collaboration)
Owner, Architect, Contractor: The Team
263(8)
Chapter 21 Level 4: Enclosure (Leading/Strategic)
271(2)
Change
Options and Value Analysis
Decision Support: Issue Tracking and Completion
Consultant Coordination
Chapter 22 Context: Supply Network, Market Forces, Emerging Technology
273(6)
Supply Network
Market Forces
Emerging Technologies
Other Considerations
Chapter 23 Understanding and Using the Framework
279(20)
Order and Logic: "Visual Onomatopoeia"
Processes: Repeatable, Shared, One Off?
Causes and Effects, Actions and Reactions
When Does Design Management Happen?
Problems (and Solutions)
How to Know
How to Coach
Self-Evaluation Quiz: Managing Design Litmus Test
Chapter 24 Case Studies
299(20)
Case Study 1 Georgia Tech Manufacturing Research Center, Atlanta
Case Study 2 Zoo Atlanta Action Conservation Research Center, Atlanta, Georgia
Case Study 3 Flint Riverquarium
Case Study 4 Hayden Library Reinvention, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona
Case Study 5 Emory University Campus Life Center, Atlanta, Georgia
Chapter 25 Actions
319(14)
What Works
In Search of [ Design] Excellence: [ Designed and] Built to Last Forty Questions My Take
Where to Focus: Drivers
It's Up to You
The Ideal Project
Take Action
The Team
A Final Request
Epilogue
333(14)
Future Vision
Prognostications and Advice
Organizational Systems Thinking: The 7-S+1 Model
Reach and Closure: Design Futures Council Summit on the Future of Architecture, 2018
Continuing
Constants and Encouragement Answers
Acknowledgments 347(2)
About the Author 349(2)
Bibliography 351(4)
Photo Credits 355(2)
Illustrations 357(2)
Index 359
Michael Alan LeFevre, FAIA Emeritus, is a Principal with DesignIntelligence Strategic Advisors and a member of the Design Futures Council. He was formerly Vice President, Planning & Design Support at Holder Construction in Atlanta, GA. As an award-winning architect he frequently speaks on the topic of design-construction collaboration. He and has been an advisory board member and guided curricula development for academic programs at the University of Michigan, Georgia Tech, Clemson, and Purdue. In his groundbreaking tenure at Holder he worked with many of the world's leading design firms on high-visibility projects such as the Apple Park Headquarter Campus, and the new Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. He now consults nationally and internationally with leading design and construction firms.