Mace had a challenge on its hands building One Crown Place, a large mixed-use scheme in the City of London – and digital tools were the answer. Kristina Smith reports.
Client: AlloyMTD
Development Manager: CBRE
Architect: Kohn Pedersen Fox
Main contractor: Mace
Start on site: April 2018
Completion: May 2021
One Crown Place, near Liverpool Street station in the City of London, is a mixed-use scheme in every way. The £225m development incorporates: two residential towers; a podium office space with roof terrace; a boutique hotel, restaurant and members’ club hidden inside a restored Georgian terrace; a refurbished 1980s office; retail along the ground floor and the retained facade of an old Victorian warehouse along one side of the scheme.
For main contractor Mace, which is delivering the new-build elements of the scheme, this project was a planning and logistics puzzle, which began in 2016 when developer AlloyMTD awarded it the pre-construction services agreement. The challenge then was how to put the pieces of the puzzle together with little or no storage space, and without causing disruption to the bustling business district around it. Of course, everything changed in March 2020, when the City fell dead, and Mace had to rethink how it could swiftly and safely finish the resource-hungry fit-out phase.
This was always going to be a project where Mace pushed its use of digital technology and, in the early days of the project, the site team was reporting the benefits of 4D visualisation and trialling new artificial intelligence (AI) technology from Disperse. However, the covid pandemic offered the opportunity to see how these digital tools could help in the face of unexpected disruption.
Planning manager Cameron Bulloch joined the scheme – and Mace – in March 2019. The former construction manager, who has a natural penchant for digital tools, talks through the technology used at One Crown Place and the benefits he observed from their deployment over the past two years.
We were not just looking at critical path and time duration analysis: we were looking at planned versus actual quality hold points.– Cameron Bulloch, Mace
A new landmark
Before Bulloch joined the project, there had been a whole year of activity on site for Mace. And before Mace arrived, O’Keefe had demolished existing buildings and created the box for the two-storey basement that houses much of the scheme’s plant.
Mace’s work involves the two prismatic residential towers, 28 storeys and 33 storeys, a six-storey, 10,650 sq m office building and shell-and-core retail at ground level.
In what feels like a topsy-turvy arrangement, the concrete frames of the two residential towers sit on top of the steel frame of the office podium building, whose top floor will boast an outdoor roof garden, gym and other facilities for residents. This required a huge steel truss to transfer the weight of the concrete towers to the edges of the steel frame for the offices, so that the office could be column free. 4D visualisation helped the site team understand and plan the steel truss, says Bulloch.
By August 2018, the three slip-formed cores for the residential towers and the office were well underway and the site team was preparing for the start of the structural steel frame. Construction of the basement and ground floor concrete slabs was also underway. Early the following year construction of the concrete frames began, with topping out in January 2020.
AI lends a hand
One Crown Place was one of the earliest Mace projects to start using Disperse, a system that uses AI and 360 images taken regularly on site to measure progress and flag up discrepancies.
“Disperse was one of the standout digital tools,” says Bulloch. “It generates a walk-through of the project that allows you to hop in, navigate and see what has happened in different areas. It highlights any differences and gives progress updates against the programme.”
This isn’t touch-of-a-button stuff. Setting Disperse up and teaching the algorithms what they are looking at takes time, says Bulloch, with the Mace and Disperse teams sitting down to identify the required information from drawings and from BIM models. Disperse isn’t a 100% AI-driven technology; humans are also involved in the checking process too.
Once the pandemic struck, Disperse became even more valuable, says Bulloch. “For planning and commercial staff, who were based at home, it became a vital bit of software,” he says. “You can do a comparison between what the construction management team and Disperse are telling us.”
It is great for record-keeping too, he adds: “All the data is stored. You can go back to the first time they scanned the job and see how the building unfolded.”
A screen grab of a typical view in the Disperse software.
Because this was an early deployment of Disperse, Mace used it only on the residential fit-out elements, although the system has developed so that it can be used on more visually complex areas such as plant rooms.
Mace uses BIM 360 Field to control quality and for snagging. A first for Bulloch was to incorporate quality hold points into the programming and planning. “We were not just looking at critical path and time duration analysis: we were looking at planned versus actual quality hold points,” he explains. “I had not done it before. It was really powerful for us as a team.”
Mace also used BIM 360 Field to track some of the build’s components including steelwork and cladding panels. Elements are labelled in the factory, scanned using the BIM 360 Field app that links to Navisworks and updates it. “It’s great for anything with a lead time,” says Bulloch. “It can tell you when something is on the manufacturing line, when it is about to be delivered, when it turns up on site.”
The pandemic also boosted the project team’s use of Microsoft Teams and analytics tool Power BI, which Mace started to use towards the end of this project.
“Using Power BI means that generating reports from a planning team perspective is a lot quicker,” says Bulloch. “The automation part of it reduces the time spent producing dash boards manually and gives us more time to analyse the data. It also meant that the client was able to make data-driven decisions.”
The structural frame of the residential towers begins to rise, November 2018.
New lean planning technique
From Bulloch’s perspective, as one of the two planning managers at One Crown Place, the biggest challenge of all was resequencing to cope with the delays and constraints due to the covid pandemic. Mace was one of the first companies to take the decision to close down sites, with One Crown Place out of operation from 23 March 2020 for around five weeks.
“We had issues with welfare capacity. We had to take into account social distancing; there was a maximum number of people we could have on site at any time,” says Bulloch.
To sequence the remaining works within these constraints, the planners turned to a lean planning technique called Takt planning (Takt or Taktzeit means beat in German). “Takt planning comes from manufacturing,” says Bulloch. “It focuses on maximising the efficiency of resources by creating a standard cycle time for different tasks, which is the Takt time.
“The idea is continuous flow, consistent work rates for crews, constant rate of production. We set up a cycle time based on the maximum number of resources we could have and safe operating procedures for our welfare capacity.”
Combining Takt planning and Last Planner, where the supply chain sits down together to look ahead to the next eight weeks and agree what will be done, worked well, says Bulloch. “The idea was it was a shift pattern. We would start an area on Monday and finish it on Friday. Any delays, we used the weekend to catch up. This went hand-in-hand with the critical chain schedule.
“We incorporated the constraint of resource into the programme logic as well. It was very beneficial from a planning perspective, forecasting issues early on so we could take mitigating measures.”
Even with the best efforts of machine and man, the project inevitably fell behind schedule.
A final integrated systems testing (ITS) test had taken place on March 25 with Mace aiming to close out snags and achieve final completion in the first few weeks of April.
But what the raft of digital aids deployed by Mace at One Crown Place seems to add up to is a fuller picture of exactly what is happening on site. Traditionally, project control has been about cost and programme, but technology like Disperse and Power BI, with their alternative presentations of data, help inform decisions and offer insight into the realities of delays.
Will this more information-rich approach help contractors and clients solve the thorny issue of who pays for covid-induced delays to projects such as One Crown Place?
That wasn’t a question that Bulloch was allowed to address. But he does say that Mace has had “a truly collaborative approach with the client”. Perhaps when the data is there to be seen and understood, there is less fear of what may be being hidden.
Learn more about Disperse: https://www.bimplus.co.uk/technology/start-ups-should-have-no-fear-working-major-contra/