What happens when your general contractor (or its subcontractors) mistakenly doesnโ€™t pick-up a condition omitted from one design disciplineโ€™s drawing sheets, but that condition is picked up on anotherโ€™s? We see this frequently where there are inconsistencies or a lack of coordination between disciplines and drawing sheets.

 

Example: Civil sheets missed a telecom vault with fiber routing into a building, but the telecom sheets have it. The general contract missed this cost, because their underground sub priced only off the civil sheets.

 

What happens? Well, if the drawings the GMP pricing is based off include the condition on any select sheet(s), then the general contractor is responsible for this cost. At this point, itโ€™s considered a โ€œmissโ€ and Construction Contingency may be utilized to capture that estimating miss. This does not become an Owner Change. If there isnโ€™t enough Construction Contingency remaining, then thatโ€™s a bigger, more difficult discussion.

Bottom line: Unless specifically noted as an exclusion, the General Contractor is responsible for โ€œallโ€ contract documents identified by the GMP. This is one key purpose for the inclusion of Construction Contingency.

 

-By Mike Barbera

 

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