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Five
years ago, design-build project delivery was poised to take
over the world. Or at least that is what some proponents seemed
to think. But with an industry recession, particularly in
some of design-build's critical private-sector markets, the
delivery system seemed more likely to roll up than rule.
Despite budget cuts and other economic
woes among owners, revenue for ENR's Top 100 Design-Build
firms still managed a slight gain of 0.3% in 2002, to $55.3
billion. That follows a big slide in 2001 for this niche from
its high point in 2000, when firms reported $58.2 billion
in total revenue.
Surprisingly, domestic revenue
for design-builders still managed to rise just under 1% to
$41.2 billion from $40.8 billion last year. But the down market
has taken its toll, since that increase follows a 2.4% hike
from 2000 to 2001. A closer look at the figures also reveals
the impact of a less active international market, generally
a fall in the number of huge, engineer-procure-construct jobs
in a stagnating world economy.
"We aren't seeing the dramatic
gains in market share that we experienced in the 1990s, but
design-build is still tracking upward," says Jeffrey
Beard, CEO of the Design-Build Institute of America, Washington,
D.C. He stresses that the delivery system's market share rose
from only about 5% in the mid 1980s to about 25% by 1999.
"Design-build is still ticking upward, although now it's
only by a point or two a year," he says. "I think
[the slowdown in growth] is a reflection of the market and
the political hurdles for public-sector design-build."
Some of those political hurdles
are falling. "Just this past year, Kentucky approved
the use of design-build on public projects," notes C.C.
Howard Gray, CEO of James N. Gray Co. He is pleased that his
home state finally has taken the plunge. "But we're not
the last" state to maintain legal roadblocks to public-sector
design-build, he says.
It is not just design-build contractors
who are chafing under legislative restrictions. "More
states, such as New York, are using program management on
their transportation programs," says Eric Keen, senior
vice president of HDR. "But New York doesn't allow design-build."
Keen believes that having design-build
in the tool box is a major advantage for program managers
on transportation projects. "We are working on a big
expansion of Trunk Highway 52 in Minnesota," he says.
"Normally, we would let four or five different contracts
and the whole job would take seven to eight years." But
Keen notes that HDR has bundled the various projects together
in a single design-build package. "The whole program
is scheduled to be completed in 40 months," he says.
DBIA is working hard to expand
the availability of design-build in the public sector. In
March, the group hired as vice president for government affairs
Craig H. Unger, a former top construction official at the
federal Bureau of Prisons. "He was instrumental in introducing
design-build to that construction program," says Gray,
who is a DBIA director and believes Unger will be critical
in advancing state legislation authorizing design-build. "He
knows the benefits from the owners' perspective and can speak
their language," Gray says.
Proponents believe that design-build
will continue to maintain its strength through the tough times.
"What it really comes down to is that it improves efficiencies
through effective communication between the parties,"
says Andy Ball, CEO of Webcor Builders. He notes that, in
tough economic times, owners value any process that leads
to efficiencies and cost savings. "They don't want to
hear about the difficulties in getting shop drawings distributed
and reviewed," he says.
Beard agrees. "Owners who
have used design-build are talking to other owners,"
he says. "They are some of design-build's best salespeople."
Click below for more>>
The Top
100: Overview
The
Top 100 Design-Build Firms List
The Top
100 Construction Managers-for-Fee
The Top 100
Construction Managers-at-Risk
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