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While not typically
considered a software developer, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
is turning some heads with a Web-based product developed in-house
to improve the design review process. The Corps and several
other federal agencies are using the software to manage design
reviews on hundreds of new construction projects. And users
say the new tools are shaving weeks off project schedules
and thousands of dollars off total costs.
The Design Review and Checking
system (DrChecks), developed at the Corps' Construction Engineering
Research Laboratory in Champaign, Ill., links designers, reviewers,
project managers and other interested parties via the Internet
to track the review of construction plans and specifications.
While bearing similarities to commercial Web-collaboration
tools developed for the architecture, engineering and construction
market, DrChecks provides a couple of attractive twists for
federal agencies. These include additional security, since
the software and data are hosted on a federal computer system,
and a structured, database-driven approach specifically geared
toward managing design reviews.
"We needed a way to
communicate design issues formally," says Bill East,
principal investigator at CERL and lead developer of ProjNet,
a series of applications that includes DrChecks and other
programs geared toward federally constructed facilities. Commercial
Web-based tools allow interaction through e-mail and discussion
groups, but those tend to be "free-for-alls," he
says.
Using a standard Web browser,
DrChecks users can log on to check a project's review status,
submit comments and responses and sort comments by date, discipline,
reviewer and other categories. Typically, a project manager
creates review phases for each project and reviewers submit
comments during each phase. Designers then evaluate and respond
to comments. Communication is logged to a database. Drawings
and other files can be attached to postings.
The structured approach helps
reviewers and designers monitor and resolve issues more efficiently,
says Robert Clarke, an architect and design information technology
manager with the U.S. State Dept.'s Overseas Building Operations
in Rossyln, Va. As reviewers, "we have been good at raising
issues, but bringing issues to resolution has been a challenge,"
he says.
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| ON
LINE East (above) developed review system that
will benefit Ft. Belvoir addition (left) and embassy (bottom).
(Photo credit) |
LESSONS
LEARNED. Key issues flagged as "lessons learned"
are shared with other parties likely to encounter the same
issues. Each potential "LL" item is sent to discipline-specific
experts to determine if the item is technically accurate and
likely to impact operations. If accepted, the LL is forwarded
to other parties and added to a knowledge base accessible
via the Web.
The State Dept. first used DrChecks
on a design-build embassy in Uganda in 1999. With an 18-month
fast-track schedule, "some people said [introducing a
new review program] was crazy," says Nancy Wilkie, design
quality assurance coordinator with the OBO. "But after
we tried it, we never looked back."
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| (Illustration
by Guy Lawrence for ENR) |
OBO has used the latest version
of DrChecks on 23 reviews and logged over 4,000 comments.
A previous version hosted locally by the State Dept. has been
used on 461 projects to track over 54,000 design issues. Clarke
estimates DrChecks can save up to $500,000 on a $100-million
project through efficient reviews and improved design, which
decreases change orders and delays.
Before adopting DrChecks, OBO used
a paper-based system to exchange comments, an inefficient
process that was difficult to track, says Wilkie. OBO has
since restructured its review procedures around the DrChecks
system, developing an "Integrated Design Review Process"
with six key steps–a kick-off meeting, collaborative
review, technical coordination, designer response, reviewer
back-check and a resolution meeting. The technical coordination
is intended to weed out comments that are redundant or out
of scope before they are passed on to designers. "We
can eliminate 20% of comments in this step," says Wilkie.
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| (Illustration
by Guy Lawrence for ENR) |
PRIVATE
EYES. Increased government efficiency also benefits
private consultants and contractors, says Joe Kelly, technical
services manager in the international division of Charlotte,
N.C.-based J.A. Jones Inc. The firm is using DrChecks on three
design-build embassy projects it won last year. "All
the comments are in one central location," he says. "You
can see whose court the ball is in." Nearly 4,000 of
the 10,000 DrChecks users are from the private sector, says
East.
The Corps is finding similar savings.
On a typical $3-million project, savings could reach $50,000,
says Pete Rossbach, a structural engineer at the Corps' Washington,
D.C., headquarters and former chief structural engineer in
the Baltimore district. A combination of value engineering
and lessons-learned applications on a barracks construction
project at Fort Meade, Md., saved $6 million, he estimates.
The Corps hopes to net big savings
on a 300,000-sq-ft addition to a building at Fort Belvoir,
Va., this year, says Scott Drumheller, project manager in
the Baltimore district. The existing 800,000-sq-ft building
had "thousands of comments" and was managed with
the Automated Review Management System (ARMS), a cumbersome,
1980s-vintage solution, he says. Using DrChecks on the addition,
Drumheller expects better communication between designers
and reviewers. "You can see your comments in context
with the rest of the review effort and get more of a global
perspective," he says.
The comment clearinghouse is particularly
helpful with projects across different time zones, says David
Worthington, systems administrator with the the Corps' Transatlantic
Center, Winchester, Va. "It's instantaneous knowledge,"
he says. Project participants can access the system at any
time of day. On smaller projects, DrChecks has decreased the
review period from weeks to as little as 48 hours, adds Wilkie.
SECURE SYSTEM.
The added security of hosting software and data on government
computers is also a key benefit to DrChecks, say government
officials. "We looked at commercial sites, but couldn't
commit to that approach because of the security issues,"
says Clarke.
"We needed to securely transfer
information," says Wilkie. "Since the Corps hosts
the site and they are a federal agency, there's a certain
level of comfort." After initially hosting DrChecks on
its own computers, the State Dept. established an accreditation
process to ensure physical security of equipment and data
if hosted externally by the Corps.
With security measures in place,
the State Dept. now takes full advantage of DrChecks communication
exchanges. In the early days of DrChecks, it would compile
comments in a spreadsheet and send an electronic file to designers,
who would fill in responses and return the edited file.
FEE BASIS. In addition to the Corps
and State Dept., the U.S. Naval Facilities Engineering Command
and the General Services Administration also are using the
system. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
is anxious to launch a trial in the no-too-distant future,
says East. The system is offered on a subscription basis to
government agencies, who pay an annual fee ranging from $10,000
to "several hundred thousand dollars" per site,
depending on the number of users, he says. A private contractor,
Resource Center Enterprises, Urbana, Ill., provides technical
support.
The Corps may have bigger plans
for the ProjNet suite. Commercial subscription services for
private firms are expected to be available this summer, says
East. The suite also may be expanded to applications outside
of construction, says Dwight Beranek, chief of engineering
and construction at Corps headquarters. "The lessons
learned concept could have applications in personnel, accounting
and other types of project management," he says.
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