Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today?

Historically, the formal form of Bills of Quantities was introduced in the United Kingdom after the Industrial Revolution in the 19th Century. They were mainly used by master tradesmen for paying their workmen and claiming payments from building owners by submitting it as partisan Final Account. BQ...

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Main Authors: Abdul Rashid, Rosli, Mustapa, Muzani, Abd. Wahid, Siti Nurhuda
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/511/1/BQ_paper_Padang_12_6_06_Rosli.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/511/
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spelling my.utm.5112017-08-30T01:17:32Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/511/ Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today? Abdul Rashid, Rosli Mustapa, Muzani Abd. Wahid, Siti Nurhuda HC Economic History and Conditions Historically, the formal form of Bills of Quantities was introduced in the United Kingdom after the Industrial Revolution in the 19th Century. They were mainly used by master tradesmen for paying their workmen and claiming payments from building owners by submitting it as partisan Final Account. BQ are widely used in most of the Commonwealth countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Hong Kong, South Africa, India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Kenya, the Middle Eastern countries etc. particularly in the traditional procurement system. BQ are mainly used for cost estimating and more importantly, as part of tender document for use in soliciting competitive tenders from contractors. They are also compiled together with contract form to form a contract document. However, as construction industry evolved and changed technologically, economically, legally and procedurally, so is the use of s in construction projects. It has been the subject of scrutiny and criticisms by the construction community. It was highlighted that the use of BQ in the UK construction industry is declining and it is possible that they will vanish from the industry in the near future. In 1991 the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors revealed that between 1984 and 1989 the usage of s in building works in the UK declined in value to almost 10%. Several reasons were given for such a situation. These include the lack of use by the project teams, its limited use after the tendering process and the increased use of more “advanced� non-traditional procurement system by the industry. That was the situation and prediction made twenty years ago. The question now “What is the situation in our construction industry today? Are BQ still relevant today, especially when more and more projects are contracted out using the non-traditional procurement systems? Are they still useful to the clients, architects, engineers and contractors throughout the construction process? This paper looks at the issue of BQ, their weakness and potential in the construction industry. 2006 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/511/1/BQ_paper_Padang_12_6_06_Rosli.pdf Abdul Rashid, Rosli and Mustapa, Muzani and Abd. Wahid, Siti Nurhuda (2006) Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today? In: International Conference on Construction Industry 2006, 21st June – 25th June 2006, Padang, Indonesia.
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
language English
topic HC Economic History and Conditions
spellingShingle HC Economic History and Conditions
Abdul Rashid, Rosli
Mustapa, Muzani
Abd. Wahid, Siti Nurhuda
Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today?
description Historically, the formal form of Bills of Quantities was introduced in the United Kingdom after the Industrial Revolution in the 19th Century. They were mainly used by master tradesmen for paying their workmen and claiming payments from building owners by submitting it as partisan Final Account. BQ are widely used in most of the Commonwealth countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Hong Kong, South Africa, India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Kenya, the Middle Eastern countries etc. particularly in the traditional procurement system. BQ are mainly used for cost estimating and more importantly, as part of tender document for use in soliciting competitive tenders from contractors. They are also compiled together with contract form to form a contract document. However, as construction industry evolved and changed technologically, economically, legally and procedurally, so is the use of s in construction projects. It has been the subject of scrutiny and criticisms by the construction community. It was highlighted that the use of BQ in the UK construction industry is declining and it is possible that they will vanish from the industry in the near future. In 1991 the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors revealed that between 1984 and 1989 the usage of s in building works in the UK declined in value to almost 10%. Several reasons were given for such a situation. These include the lack of use by the project teams, its limited use after the tendering process and the increased use of more “advanced� non-traditional procurement system by the industry. That was the situation and prediction made twenty years ago. The question now “What is the situation in our construction industry today? Are BQ still relevant today, especially when more and more projects are contracted out using the non-traditional procurement systems? Are they still useful to the clients, architects, engineers and contractors throughout the construction process? This paper looks at the issue of BQ, their weakness and potential in the construction industry.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Abdul Rashid, Rosli
Mustapa, Muzani
Abd. Wahid, Siti Nurhuda
author_facet Abdul Rashid, Rosli
Mustapa, Muzani
Abd. Wahid, Siti Nurhuda
author_sort Abdul Rashid, Rosli
title Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today?
title_short Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today?
title_full Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today?
title_fullStr Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today?
title_full_unstemmed Bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today?
title_sort bills of quantities : are they still useful and relevant today?
publishDate 2006
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/511/1/BQ_paper_Padang_12_6_06_Rosli.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/511/
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score 13.154949