The latest government data shows dramatic variations in the cost of construction procurement across the public sector. But will arming decision-makers with these figures turn them into leaner, more savvy clients? 黑洞社区 reports

Last week, Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude published the first progress report on the government鈥檚 ambitious strategy to cut the cost of construction by 15-20% across the public sector by the end of parliament. So far, savings of 2% have been made on the 2009/10 benchmark - equivalent to up to 拢180m, which, though small, leaves the government on track to meet its target.

More significant, amid the raft of data, are figures that demonstrate, for the first time, exactly how haphazard and varied the government鈥檚 buying of construction has been until now. Last year鈥檚 publication of the James Review shocked many by revealing how some schools, considered on a pound per square metre basis, cost more than twice as much as others. A result, we were told, of the profligate and uncontrolled 黑洞社区 Schools for the Future system.

锘縄f you do choose to spend twice as much on a school as you might have had to, your electorate should know

Paul Morrell, chief construction adviser

But last week鈥檚 data gets under the bonnet of construction procurement across government, and shows exactly the same thing. It sets out, for the first time, benchmark cost data for hospitals, flood defences, prisons and roads, as well as schools - data on rail, housing and all the rest of government spending will be included in future benchmarks. It finds that the average ratio between cheap and expensive projects is 1:1.8. In other words, the government is building some buildings at nearly double the cost of others.

Having lifted the lid, the question now is how the publication of this information can help in the drive to cut costs, and whether the wider strategy can deliver savings.

Empowerment through data

The data gives a fascinating insight into the cost of public buildings. And it isn鈥檛 reliant on freak results, as the ratio compares the cost of projects at the 20th percentile of cost with the 80th percentile - not the absolute cheapest or priciest. While some buildings - large schools, for example - are relatively consistent in cost, others, such as healthcare buildings and flood defences, are wildly varying. Refurbishments under the Procure 21 health framework in 2009/10, for example, varied in cost from 拢1,130 to 拢2,450 per m2. The cost of flood defence walls built by the Environment Agency was between 拢1,386 and 拢3,784 per metre.

For chief construction adviser Paul Morrell, the man who devised the government鈥檚 Construction Strategy, these cost disparities are hugely significant because they indicate how much scope there is for saving money. With finite resources, the impact of building one school at twice the price is that one less school gets built. 鈥淭his data shows you in a single blow that you can knock 20% off the price of an average school by doing consistently what you already know how to do well,鈥 says Morrell. 鈥淚f you know that, then you go into the market in a new way.鈥

This description of a public sector that doesn鈥檛 know how much its buildings should cost is familiar to the industry. Dave Mathieson, director at consultant Turner & Townsend, says: 鈥淧reviously people have set a budget and spent it without really any understanding of whether it鈥檚 high or low - it hasn鈥檛 been based on evidence.鈥

Of course, there are many reasons for variations in cost, many of which may be genuine, such as the complexity of a particular site, the one-off nature of a project as opposed to something that is part of a programme. But Morrell says that, for schools, the price variation is huge even when the data has been normalised for these factors. 鈥淭here will be random circumstances around projects,鈥 he admits. 鈥淏ut some of [the disparity] will be discretionary decisions made around, for example, the more gymnastic aspects of design, because people thought that鈥檚 what they wanted. But they were uninformed by what that particular design might be compared with.鈥

Morrell鈥檚 prescription is that, armed with the data about what a building should cost, those procuring buildings will be forced to justify more expensive projects. 鈥淚 know this is very much on Francis Maude鈥檚 mind: if you do choose to spend twice as much on a school as you might have had to, you might be at liberty to make that decision, but your electorate should know,鈥 he says.

锘縄t鈥檚 information that makes the client think hard about what they鈥檙e buying - do they want a Rolls-Royce, or a Ford?

David Fison, Osborne

Publishing the numbers, he says, will influence people to change what they buy, and make them much more cost-conscious.

As David Fison, chief executive at contractor Osborne, says: 鈥淚t鈥檚 information that makes the client think hard about what they鈥檙e buying - do they want a Rolls-Royce, or do they want a Ford?鈥

It is a viewpoint with which consultants, the number crunchers of the industry, concur. John Hicks, head of government and public at Aecom-owned Davis Langdon, says: 鈥淭his report is key. It will force councils to say, 鈥楬ow come that school in Manchester managed to do it cheaper?鈥 It鈥檚 about empowerment through data.鈥

It also aims to address what most regard as the toughest challenge with construction procurement - spreading the knowledge to the 40,000 or so building buyers across the wider public sector - by arming them with the knowledge to become better informed clients.

Local difficulties

However, while the publication of benchmarks is welcomed, some say that the drive to eliminate cost variation between projects is futile, given the huge variation in circumstances between different projects, and that it could lead to false expectations of improvements.

Osborne鈥檚 Fison says: 鈥淗owever they crunch the data, it won鈥檛 be comparing like with like, so there will always be big variations in cost. The per square metre price difference between a low-rise acute hospital and a high-rise one on a constricted site with a large number of surgical wards will always be huge.

鈥淢ore significantly, there is a tension between Morrell鈥檚 prescription for savings realised by centralised procurement by clients with large programmes of work, and the government鈥檚 鈥渓ocalism鈥 agenda, which will encourage the growth of inexperienced one-off clients buying buildings.

It is what Davis Langdon鈥檚 Hicks describes as 鈥渢he price of democracy鈥, and it is the major challenge to Morrell鈥檚 vision of educated clients buying in an intelligent way.
Graham Watts, chief executive of the Construction Industry Council, says: 鈥淚 can鈥檛 see the governors of free schools having the knowledge to do this. Localism inevitably implies a trade-off, and I suspect buildings will be costing more [because of this].鈥

Morrell鈥檚 strategy also relies on civil servants taking much tighter control of projects - an issue that was behind last week鈥檚 announcement of a 拢6.7m civil service leadership academy for major project leaders - at a time when cuts mean many departments are losing senior staff.

Darren Talbot, head of schools at Davis Langdon, says the public sector, in cutting consultant support, will have to be careful not to throw the baby out with the bathwater. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a really nice idea,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a big bang approach. But you have to ask, if there are all these great project managers in the public sector, then where have they been hiding them for the last few years?鈥

With progress updates on the strategy due every three months, we鈥檒l find out sooner rather than later if Morrell鈥檚 prescription is right.

Construction strategy progress

黑洞社区 Information Modelling

The construction strategy stipulated that all central government projects should use level 2 BIM by 2016. The Ministry of Justice has been the first to sign up, committing to become an early adopter of the technology and use it on four prison projects.

Morrell says the uptake of BIM has exceeded expectations since the launch and that the roll-out to other departments is on course. 鈥淐ertainly the statement that this is the only way government is going to buy by 2016 seems to have galvanised action all over the place,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he strategy is well-resourced, it is properly funded within government, it is structured and I鈥檓 really pleased with the way it鈥檚 coming along.鈥

Procurement pilots

Seven government schemes worth more than 拢30m in total will pilot three new forms of procurement across four departments. Morrell says the new methods have been designed to reap the benefits of partnership working while maximising competitive tension to keep prices down.

The Environment Agency and the Ministry of Defence are to take forward 鈥渃ost-led procurement鈥, which will involve contractors within a framework bidding according to cost benchmarks. The Homes and Communities Agency and the Environment Agency will take forward a modified version of this, called 鈥渢wo-stage open book鈥 under which chosen contractors will have to work up detailed proposals on an open-book basis.

The construction strategy had said these systems would be up and running by October last year, but the announcement was delayed while a scheme was found to trial the third pilot - 鈥渋ntegrated project insurance鈥, where the client has one insurance policy that covers the entire integrated team. This will be taken forward by the Ministry of Defence.

Next steps

According to last summer鈥檚 strategy, the Cabinet Office will:

  • Set cost benchmarks for all government departments by March
  • Set and agree required BIM information requirements by April
  • Review criteria for Whole Life Value by April
  • Establish criteria to assess the impact of cancelling projects