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Project Fast-Tracking: Developing in the Left Lane
/in Insights-Commercial, Insights-Land Development /by Jared KrohThis article appeared in the December 27, 2007 issue of the Mid-Atlantic Real Estate Journal and is published here with their permission.
How fast do you drive down the expressway? Do you cruise the speed limit in the right lane, or do you accelerate past the speed limit in the left lane?
In today’s fast-paced real estate market, driving the speed limit is no longer an option. You must accelerate your project through the design and approval phases quickly or risk rising costs (and lower profits). Many changing factors pressure your projects. Tenant requirements, practical financing and regulatory burdens are just a few. Drive too slowly and you risk losing a tenant, acquiring a higher finance rate, or facing more stringent regulatory requirements. Put the right team behind the wheel, and you can drive your project to success, rather than end up as an accident on the 6:00 news.
In years past, developers and owners fast-tracked a project to meet the requirements of others (such as a potential tenant), but today fast-tracking is initiated by the developers and owners themselves in order to maximize their profits. Putting your project on the fast track can be done in many ways: It could mean awarding the contract as a design-build or adding provisions to the contract that impose a penalty if the consultant doesn’t complete the project by a given deadline. Whatever approach you take, planning and foresight are necessary to avoid potential obstacles and ensure different disciplines coordinate their work to reduce delay. This is why having a strong team on your side is the best way to meet your goals.
By working closely from the earliest stages of project development, your team can simultaneously work on the project components to complete your project most efficiently. Some companies work well as one member of the team, while others do well as the entire team. If you already work with the best site entitlement company and architect, you obviously want them to work together in your best interest. This can be very effective by utilizing different discipline experts. Another great option is companies that provide a wide range of services under one roof. This makes the coordination effort of each component much smoother. Just as you get a flat tire, projects often develop issues that are unexpected. Companies with multiple services are able to react to changing conditions quickly. Find wetlands on a project: have the environmental group delineate and mitigate; acquire the adjoining parcel: have the survey group add it to the plan; realize a bridge is better then a culvert: have the structures group design it. This flexibility decreases the coordination effort of identifying and contracting with separate consultants for each project component.
Before starting a project, sit down with your consultant and expect them to answer your questions honestly. Can you get that permit by spring? Will there be issues like zoning you can avoid by taking a different route? Be sure to develop a relationship of trust with your consultant, and expect the same in return.
By working cohesively as a team and developing a realistic schedule that addresses all issues, you will reach your destination in the quickest timeframe. Find a consultant that will slow down to address those issues that may truly stall your project but be aggressive in moving your project through the approval process. In the end, your project will be up and running like a well-oiled machine.
Andrew Kenworthy, P.E., has extensive expertise in the areas of site planning, layout and design, zoning and regulatory requirements, permitting, stormwater management, erosion control, roadway and utility design, and bidding and construction administration. He can be reached by phone at (717) 564-1121 or by email at akenworthy@hrg-inc.com