Quality control in construction
typically involves insuring compliance with minimum standards of
material and workmanship in order to insure the performance of the
facility according to the design. These minimum standards are contained
in the specifications described in the previous section. For
the purpose of insuring compliance, random samples and statistical
methods are commonly used as the basis for accepting or rejecting work
completed and batches of materials. Rejection of a batch is based on
non-conformance or violation of the relevant design specifications.
Procedures for this quality control practice are described in the
following sections.
An implicit assumption in these
traditional quality control practices is the notion of an acceptable
quality level which is a allowable fraction of defective items.
Materials obtained from suppliers or work performed by an organization
is inspected and passed as acceptable if the estimated defective
percentage is within the acceptable quality level. Problems with
materials or goods are corrected after delivery of the product.
In contrast to this traditional approach
of quality control is the goal of total quality control. In this
system, no defective items are allowed anywhere in the construction
process. While the zero defects goal can never be permanently obtained,
it provides a goal so that an organization is never satisfied with its
quality control program even if defects are reduced by substantial
amounts year after year. This concept and approach to quality control
was first developed in manufacturing firms in Japan and Europe, but has
since spread to many construction companies. The best known formal
certification for quality improvement is the International Organization
for Standardization’s ISO 9000 standard. ISO 9000 emphasizes good
documentation, quality goals and a series of cycles of planning,
implementation and review.
Total quality control is a commitment to
quality expressed in all parts of an organization and typically
involves many elements. Design reviews to insure safe and effective
construction procedures are a major element. Other elements include
extensive training for personnel, shifting the responsibility for
detecting defects from quality control inspectors to workers, and
continually maintaining equipment. Worker involvement in improved
quality control is often formalized in quality circles in which groups
of workers meet regularly to make suggestions for quality improvement.
Material suppliers are also required to insure zero defects in delivered
goods. Initally, all materials from a supplier are inspected and
batches of goods with any defective items are returned. Suppliers with
good records can be certified and not subject to complete inspection
subsequently.
The traditional microeconomic view of
quality control is that there is an “optimum” proportion of defective
items. Trying to achieve greater quality than this optimum would
substantially increase costs of inspection and reduce worker
productivity. However, many companies have found that commitment to
total quality control has substantial economic benefits that had been
unappreciated in traditional approaches. Expenses associated with
inventory, rework, scrap and warranties were reduced. Worker enthusiasm
and commitment improved. Customers often appreciated higher quality work
and would pay a premium for good quality. As a result, improved quality
control became a competitive advantage.
Of course, total quality control is
difficult to apply, particular in construction. The unique nature of
each facility, the variability in the workforce, the multitude of
subcontractors and the cost of making necessary investments in education
and procedures make programs of total quality control in construction
difficult. Nevertheless, a commitment to improved quality even without
endorsing the goal of zero defects can pay real dividends to
organizations.
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