Case Study of Sustainability of the PIPS Best Value Program at the University of Minnesota

Case Study of Sustainability of the PIPS Best Value Program at the University of Minnesota

By Kenneth T. Sullivan, John Savicky, Dean Kashiwagi

June 2018

Abstract
This is a case study testing the hypothesis that the best value PIPS process is a sustainable process/structure. The best value PIPS process has been tested 450 times over 13 years. However, the process/structure has not been sustainable, meaning that users have been successful at individual tests, but unable to imbed the system into their organization and standard operating procedures. It has been resisted because it minimizes the need for construction management, simplifies the delivery process and transfers both risk and control to the contractors. The University of Minnesota approached the Performance Based Studies Research Group (PBSRG) to test and implement the process. Unlike other research clients, they agreed to meet the requirements for sustainability: implementing a long term strategic plan, using and instructing a core team, running tests before full implementation, and implementing continuous education to both client professionals and contractors. This study shows the results of the hypothesis testing.

This content is locked

Become a Member to unlock this resource »

Free Member

  • Connect with Best Value peers and leadership
  • Find upcoming conferences
  • Learn about the Best Value Approach
  • Read the latest news
  • Access to Academic & Research papers

PBSRG Member

  • Free online B/B+ training material for 3 months
  • Exclusive access to videos and conferences
  • A/A+ level coaching from certification board members