JC Virtual PMs Podcast

What Is A Design Responsibility Matrix And Why Does Every Project Need One

12 min · 31 mei 2026
aflevering What Is A Design Responsibility Matrix And Why Does Every Project Need One artwork

Beschrijving

One of the most common causes of design disputes, coordination failures and programme delays is a simple lack of clarity about who is responsible for what. On multi-disciplinary projects, the boundaries between disciplines are rarely clean — and where responsibility is ambiguous, things fall through the gaps. A Design Responsibility Matrix (DRM) exists to close those gaps.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de JC Virtual PMs Podcast community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

10 afleveringen

aflevering How To Manage Scope Creep In The Design Stage Before It Reaches The Site artwork

How To Manage Scope Creep In The Design Stage Before It Reaches The Site

Scope creep is one of the most reliable ways to turn a well-planned construction project into an expensive, overrun one. It rarely arrives dramatically — it accumulates quietly, one apparently reasonable request at a time, until the project the client is building bears little resemblance to the project they budgeted and programmed. By the time the consequences are visible, the changes are already embedded in the design, contracted into the works or partially built. Scope creep in design typically starts with small additions — a client who wants an extra room here, a specification uplift there. Each change seems manageable in isolation. The problem is cumulative: by the time the project reaches procurement, the brief has expanded significantly, the programme has been eroded by the additional design time and the budget is under pressure. When the contractor is appointed, these costs crystallise — and the client is often surprised by the gap between the original estimate and the tender price.

Gisteren14 min
aflevering Design Freeze- What It Is, When To Call It, And What Happens When You Don’T artwork

Design Freeze- What It Is, When To Call It, And What Happens When You Don’T

Design freeze is one of those project management concepts that sounds straightforward in theory and proves remarkably difficult to enforce in practice. The idea is simple: at a defined point in the design process, the scope is fixed, the design is locked, and changes can only be made through a formal change control process. In practice, design freeze is routinely ignored, softened, moved or quietly abandoned — with consequences that range from programme delay to significant cost overruns and site-level rework. In practice, ‘design freeze’ is frequently misunderstood, poorly enforced, or simply not called at all. The consequences range from minor inefficiencies to serious contract disputes. This article explains what design freeze really means, when to call it and what happens on projects where it is never properly established.

5 jun 202618 min
aflevering BIM Level 2 Vs ISO 19650- What UK SMEs Actually Need To Know artwork

BIM Level 2 Vs ISO 19650- What UK SMEs Actually Need To Know

If you work in the UK construction industry, you have almost certainly encountered both terms. BIM Level 2 was the framework that drove the industry’s adoption of Building Information Modelling over the past decade — the government mandate, the PAS standards, the CDE requirements. ISO 19650 is the international standard that has now effectively superseded it. The relationship between the two is one of the most common sources of confusion for SME clients, contractors and consultants trying to understand what is actually required of them on a given project. BIM Level 2 was a UK government mandate introduced in 2011 and fully implemented across all centrally procured government projects by April 2016. It required project teams to produce and exchange 3D information in a structured, collaborative way, using a defined set of standards and protocols — primarily PAS 1192-2 — and to deliver project data in a format that could be used for facilities management. The intention was to improve efficiency, reduce errors and build a richer information base for the operation of built assets.

3 jun 202621 min
aflevering The SME Client’S Guide To Appointing A Principal Designer Under CDM 2015 artwork

The SME Client’S Guide To Appointing A Principal Designer Under CDM 2015

The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 — CDM 2015 — place legal duties on everyone involved in a construction project. For SME clients in particular, one of the most important and most frequently misunderstood of these duties is the appointment of the Principal Designer. Getting this appointment wrong — or failing to make it at all — can leave the client in breach of their statutory obligations and personally liable for the consequences. Many SME developers and construction clients either misunderstand their obligations under CDM 2015 or leave the Principal Designer appointment until far too late in the design process. Getting this wrong creates legal risk for the client and can create health and safety problems that are difficult and costly to address later. This guide explains what you need to know as a client, when to make the appointment and what to look for when selecting a Principal Designer.

1 jun 202617 min