Good design can help save costs, says minister
Construction minister Mark Prisk has sought to reassure architects that the government鈥檚 drive to standardise public buildings will not cut them out of procurement.
He said that the government valued good design, which could actually help cut construction costs.
Alongside the Budget two weeks ago the government committed to cut construction procurement costs by 20% partly through standardising buildings and cutting out 鈥渂espoke鈥 design.
Speaking to journalists this morning, Prisk said: 鈥淭he point here is that we need to do is look at sensible cost models. That does not remove the opportunity in design and improvements in design. Innovative design can鈥id that cost reduction.鈥
He said that one problem was that public bodies had often added on extras to designs, which took them away from the architect鈥檚 original plans.
鈥淲hat it鈥檚 [standardisation] trying to do is not have a completely uniformity but avoid different bodies tacking on different elements, by a process of incremental addition,鈥 he said.
When asked whether architects would play less of a process in public construction procurement than under Labour, Prisk said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult to judge. We do value the role of good design.鈥
Education Secretary Michael Gove has repeatedly attacked architects over their role in the scrapped 黑洞社区 Schools for the Future programme, saying that they had 鈥渃reamed off cash鈥.
Prisk also denied that there was a contradiction between the government鈥檚 aim to have longer-term frameworks 鈥 another way in which it plans to hit the 20% target 鈥 and give SMEs move public sector work. 鈥淲e want frameworks to help the whole supply chain, not just tier one,鈥 he said.
鈥淲hen we talk about standardisation, it allows medium size businesses to compete.鈥
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