1 / 25

Sainsbury’s Castle Vale

Sainsbury’s Castle Vale. Charles Botsford BIW Technologies. Sainsbury’s Castle Vale. Castle Vale J Sainsbury Development’s £30 million regeneration scheme Started June 1999 Opened 29 July 2000. Sainsbury’s Castle Vale. Demolition of existing Castle Vale shopping centre

Download Presentation

Sainsbury’s Castle Vale

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sainsbury’s Castle Vale Charles Botsford BIW Technologies

  2. Sainsbury’s Castle Vale Castle Vale J Sainsbury Development’s £30 million regeneration scheme Started June 1999 Opened 29 July 2000

  3. Sainsbury’s Castle Vale Demolition of existing Castle Vale shopping centre and 19 storey block of flats

  4. Sainsbury’s Castle Vale Creation of 50,000sq ft supermarket, petrol station, five retail units 85,000sq ft, dentist, post office, job shop, Thomas Cook and Comet

  5. Sainsbury’s Castle Vale First live project for Sainsbury where BIW Information Channel used Keen to work with Sainsbury because they were pioneers in partnering

  6. BIW Information Channel • BIW Information Channel • Came out of Government funded research project • Essentially the legacy archive from Process Protocol

  7. BIW Information Channel • Web-based project collaboration system • Allows all members of a geographically diverse and corporately fragmented project team to exchange documents via the Internet in a controlled and secure way • Internet provides the infrastructure to handle project documentation, which effectively controls project co-ordination • Permits smallest supplier with low cost, accessible system • Viewer application outweighs compatibility issues between user applications

  8. BIW Information Channel • Manages project information • Submit document onto drawing register • Notification via project headlines page • Documents no longer sent via the post • Documents only printed when required • Allows monitoring of all data exchanges • Ensures effective and transparent information flow • Supersedes hardware and software upgrades • Lessons learnt can inform future projects • Will substantially reduce production cost and time whilst increasing quality, if only every project team member co-operates (Kelly et al, 1997)

  9. BIW Information Channel Meetings E-mail, CAD, Word, Excel, PPT Telephone/ Fax Post Letters/ Minutes Drawings VRM’s Contracts Reports Photos RFI’s Specifications Schedules/ Programmes

  10. BIW Information Channel Client Sub Contractor Engineer Main Contractor Q.S Architect

  11. BIW Information Channel Client Sub Contractor Engineer Information Channel Q.S Main Contractor Architect

  12. Angela Lee’s Research • Metrics • Reduce project postal cost (time, cost, quality) • Reduce project printing cost (cost, quality) • Reduce number of drawing revisions (quality) • Cost/ effect of using the system (time, cost, quality) • Effective operation of system (time) • Methodology • Series of workshops and interviews • Attitudinal survey questionnaire • Data generated by BIW Information Channel

  13. Angela Lee’s Research To reduce postal cost (time) • Measured time saved by ‘posting’ a document via the system • Significantly reduced postal time, and enables project members to see if colleagues have viewed the drawing (when, and if at all).

  14. Angela Lee’s Research To reduce postal cost (cost) • Measured total postage and packaging costs • Saved project a minimum of £6,282 This assumes that each company would have been sent 1 copy of each document, as not every company requires a copy and some will require more than 1; drawing are usually sent in sets so the cost of sending 1 drawing is 10p, whereas other project documents are not (36p); results do account for all the copies that have been ‘lost’ and have to be resent or additional courier costs.

  15. Angela Lee’s Research To reduce postal cost (quality) • Measured impact of receiving documents on time/ as soon as they were completed • Project team in favor in terms of posting project documents

  16. Angela Lee’s Research Conclusions from Angela Lee’s research • 87% of the respondents agreed that the PIC provided significant benefits over the traditional flow of construction information. However, the benefits are somewhat restricted as the system was not introduced at the outset • System outweighed nearly all postal costs • System’s success depends on project participation • Becomes key actor in communication network • Loses effectiveness when someone refuses to participate • Culture change • In order to obtain the maximum benefits, the following have to be ascertained: • Maintain a partnering and preferred suppliers relationship • Align each company’s business process to the system • More training for the suppliers and subcontractors, particularly of the benefits of the system to the whole project team

  17. Growth in use Number of companies using BIW Information Channel

  18. Benefits • Client has direct access to project information • Integration of entire supply chain • Create information once only • Allows best solution to be adopted • Information on demand (pull) • Correct information at right time

  19. Benefits • Savings in time and costs • Facilitates teamworking • Transparent audit trail • Reduces risk of litigation • Use information for operations & maintenance • No additional Hardware or Software costs

  20. End Slide “building value by exchanging knowledge”

More Related