Technical Supervision of Construction – Ensuring Quality, Compliance and Cost Control
Construction can only be a profitable and reliable business when professionals carry it out.
No matter how well a project is designed or how impressive the architectural concept may be, poor execution on-site can nullify all the efforts of the experts involved. How can this be avoided? The answer is technical supervision of construction.
The Main Purpose of Technical Supervision is to monitor compliance with approved design and cost documentation, building regulations and standards, ensuring that:
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The scope, cost, quality and timing of works.
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The quality of materials, structures, components and equipment supplied all meet the required standards.
VS Project Technical Supervision Services
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Supervision of construction works in accordance with the Contract.
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Verification of completed works, structures, materials, and equipment against project specifications, state standards, and building codes.
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Inspection of works at all stages, including hidden works.
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Review of documentation confirming the quality of structures, materials, and equipment – technical passports, certificates, and laboratory test results.
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Verification and endorsement of work completion certificates, installed equipment, and volumes for submission to the Client.
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Recording of all accepted and paid construction works, as well as works completed with deficiencies.
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Collection of quality certificates and/or compliance certificates from the Contractor for materials and equipment supplied.
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Provision, if required, of results from field or laboratory tests and measurements.
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Maintenance of records for all tests, with timely reporting to the Client of any deviations or non-compliance.
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Photo and video documentation of construction processes.
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Participation in the acceptance of completed construction works.
The Results for the Client
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Delivery of the facility exactly as originally planned.
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Confidence that the building will not suffer from future operational issues caused by poor-quality work or missing documentation.
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Assurance that no payments were made for fictitious works or overstated volumes.
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Certainty that contractors did not inflate material consumption.
