Knowledge Base — Construction Scheduling

Scheduling insights for owners,
attorneys, and GCs

Practical guidance written for the people who hire scheduling experts. Every article addresses a specific decision point or risk that comes with engaging P6 expertise on a construction program.

Data Center Scheduling

Long-Lead Equipment Risk on Hyperscale Data Center Programs

Power availability is the defining constraint on new hyperscale builds. Current lead times, demand pressure, and the planning errors that cause missed RFS dates — with downloadable reference paper.

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Owner's Rep Guidance

5 P6 Red Flags Every Owner's Rep Should Catch

What OPMs miss in monthly P6 updates — and what they should be looking for.

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Construction Attorney Guide

TIA vs. Windows Analysis: An Attorney's Guide

Method selection determines what your expert can prove. Know before you retain.

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GC Strategy

How RFP Schedule Exhibits Are Scored on Design-Build Bids

The 5 criteria evaluators use before price is opened.

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Transit & Public Agency

What Transit Agencies Need from Independent Schedule Review

How independent review complements strong internal project controls teams.

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Schedule Quality

DCMA 14-Point: 6 Failures Most Contractor Schedules Have

What fails, why, and how to fix each one in P6.

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Forensic Scheduling

5 P6 Schedule Manipulation Patterns Found in XER Files

What looks normal in a Gantt but is obvious in the XER.

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Owner's Rep Guidance

The 12 Buried Schedule Risks That Surface Too Late

Twelve patterns that hide in clean-looking schedules — and how to catch them before they become claims.

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Data Center Scheduling

The 100x ROI of Hyperscale Data Center Schedule Review

A single day of RFS slip costs more than most schedule reviews. The math hyperscale owners can't afford to skip.

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Construction Attorney Guide

TIA vs Windows vs Collapsed As-Built: Which Holds Up?

Which delay methodology survives cross-examination — and why methodology selection matters before retention.

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Schedule Quality

Beyond DCMA 14-Point: Why a Passing Score Isn't Enough

A passing DCMA score isn't the same as a defensible schedule. Six additional checks every serious peer review runs.

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Owner's Rep Guidance

The 10-Point Monthly Schedule Narrative Most Teams Don't Write

Why most monthly narratives describe instead of analyze — and the 10-point structure that fixes it.

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Delay Analysis

The Half-Step: Telling Real Delay from Creative Scheduling

AACE MIP 3.4 splits a schedule update into progress-only effects and non-progress revisions, so analysts can tell whether the critical path slipped from actual performance or a rewritten plan.

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Design Build Schedules

Progressive Design-Build Schedules: Where the Float Goes to Die

PDB schedules aren't traditional CPM with a new label. The two-phase structure, GMP pivot, and overlap of design and construction create milestones and risks a conventional schedule won't capture.

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Healthcare Scheduling

Hospital Schedules: Why They Break and Who Owns the Pieces

Hospital schedules fail because complexity spans regulators, ICRA, MEP density, OFCI equipment, and activation. Here's what owners and GCs each have to own - and where their schedules collide.

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cGMP / Pharma

cGMP Schedules: Why Pharma Projects Are Really Two Projects, and What Owners and GCs Each Have to Carry

A pharma facility isn't done at substantial completion. It's done at PAI readiness, after C&Q, IQ, OQ, PQ, and process validation. Here's what owners and GCs each have to carry to get there on time.

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Public Rail / Transit

Why Gateway Took Twenty Years: The Real Drivers of Public Rail Schedules

Federated governance, federal funding cycles, NEPA, utility relocation, and live-service constraints define public rail schedules. Here's what transit agencies and GCs each have to own to deliver.

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Environmental / Permitted Projects

When the Fish, the Birds, and the Agencies All Have a Say

On environmentally constrained projects, the critical path runs through permits, consultations, and work windows - not through the trades. Here's what owners and GCs each have to own to stay on schedu

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Data Center Scheduling

Data Center Schedules: When Everything Is Long-Lead and the Utility Owns the Critical Path

Data centers don't miss schedule because construction is hard. They miss because utility interconnection, switchgear lead times, and Level 5 commissioning each carry floors nothing can compress.

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Nuclear Scheduling

Nuclear Schedules: Where Fuel Load Is the Finish Line

Nuclear projects aren't done at substantial completion. They're done when the NRC authorizes fuel load, after every ITAAC closes and every NCR resolves. Here's what owners and GCs each have to carry.

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Airport Scheduling

Airport Schedules: Building the Machine While It's Still Running

Airports never close. FAA, TSA, CBP, and the airlines all have a say in what gets built and when. Here's what owners and GCs each have to own to open the terminal on the day it was promised.

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Forensic Scheduling

Windows Analysis: Slicing the Project Into Stories You Can Defend

Windows Analysis divides a project into time slices and measures delay in each, producing a chronological narrative that respects how the critical path actually shifts. Here's how to do it defensibly.

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Forensic Scheduling

Time Impact Analysis

TIA is contract-mandated, widely used, and often misapplied. It works prospectively for EOT requests and change orders. Stretched into retrospective forensic use, it accumulates serious problems.

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Forensic Scheduling

Collapsed As-Built: The But-For Schedule and the Judgment Calls Hiding Inside It

Collapsed As-Built asks what would have happened without specific delays. Intuitive, clean, and controversial - every step involves judgment calls that determine the result. Use with discipline.

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Forensic Scheduling

Concurrent Delay: The Concept That Breaks More Claims Than Any Method

Concurrent delay isn't a method. It's the concept that cuts across every method and reduces more otherwise-meritorious claims than anything else. Definitions vary. Jurisdiction matters. Get it right.

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GC Strategy

Case Study: Perth New Children's Hospital

How a AUD 1.2 Billion Hospital Lost Nearly Three Years, Finished Through Arbitration, and Became a Textbook Study in What Hospital Schedules Actually Break Over

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