Once the project team has agreed on values and goals through early alignment workshops (in steps 1 and 2), chosen an appropriate business model and a contract structure (in step 3), and agreed on a roadmap for implementation (in step 4), it is ready to implement methodically the project process and follow through to project completion.
Before engaging in schematic design, teams need to complete an early analysis of the interrelationships among project systems and how each individual’s role relates to the other team members’ roles.
This step is outlined by the Integrative Process LEED credit (US Green Building Council 2015).
A concerted effort is required to maintain the necessary high level of collaboration in an integrated team. A facilitator may be needed for the length of the project, to sustain the collaboration and ensure that the team reaps the benefits of its earlier cost and time investments.
Ensuring that the values of the project are passed down into construction and operation is one of the biggest challenges—and often where poorly integrated teams mistakenly take short cuts and inadvertently compromise green performance. Including the building operator in the design team and reviewing roles and responsibilities with the builder’s teams helps ensure continuity, and coordinating the commissioning schedule with the construction schedule helps to efficiently verify performance targets.
There is no final step in an integrated design and delivery project. The operations team must be trained at the end of construction, but tracking performance and monitoring key performance indicators continues for the life of the building.
Case Study: Lion’s Gate Wastewater Treatment Plant