TITLE
- MANAGING QUALITY IN A "GREEN" CONSTRUCTION PROJECT
Chapter 01
1.1 Introduction
The environmental impact of human
activity has been a source of controversy and concern for decades. Much of the
focus over that time has been on impacts such as pollution and the destruction
or degradation of wildlife habitats and ecosystems. Over the past several
years, however, concerns have increased greatly about greenhouse gases,
resource depletion, and degradation of ecological services such as water
supply.
Green construction (CPM) is the
overall planning, coordination, and control of a project from inception to
completion aimed at meeting a client’s requirements in order to produce a
functionally and financially viable project. CPM is project management that
applies to the construction sector (3rd Forum”International Construction
Project Management” 26th/27 June 2003 in Berlin).
The green
construction planning (a primary US construction management certification and
advocacy body) says the 120 most common responsibilities of a Construction
Manager fall into the following 7 categories: Project Management Planning, Cost
Management, Time Management, Quality Management, Contract Administration,
Safety Management, and CM Professional Practice which includes specific
activities like defining the responsibilities and management structure of the
project management team, organizing and leading by implementing project
controls, defining roles and responsibilities and developing communication
protocols, and identifying elements of project design and construction likely
to give rise to disputes and claims.
The construction, characteristics,
operation, and demolition of buildings are increasingly recognized as a major
source of environmental impact, including direct effects on humans:
• Buildings account for about a
third of energy consumption world-wide, and 40%in the United States, with
residential buildings contributing slightly more than half of that percentage.
from 1980 to 2006, total building energy consumption in the United States
increased more than 46%. Whether such growth rates will continue in the future
is uncertain.
• Use of water by buildings in the
United States grew by more than 26% between 1985 and 2005. Such increases in
water use are occurring in the context of stresses to the water supply caused
by recent droughts and growing concerns about drying trends in the climates of
western states.
• Building demolition and
construction accounted for 60% of nonindustrial waste tonnage in the United
States in 1996, with about one-fourth recovered through processing or
recycling.
• Buildings produce almost 40% of
carbon dioxide emissions in the United States, with a projected increase in
such emissions of more than 1% per year through 2030.
• Some characteristics of buildings
are known to affect several aspects of human health and productivity, such as
the incidence of allergies and respiratory illness.
Most people spend far more time
inside buildings than outside, and the air in buildings often has substantially
higher concentrations of pollutants than the air outside. “Sick building
syndrome” has been estimated to affect as much as quarter of office workers.
Temperature and lighting have been found to have significant effects on worker
performance.
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