Laserfiche WebLink
STATEMENT OF QUALIFICATIONS <br />UNDERSTANDING OF NEED <br />v. Construction Documents (PS&E) - After our fast - <br />paced DO phase, with a true concept plan in hand, we'll <br />jump right into construction documents. As outlined in the <br />RFP, we will provide and submit 30%-60%-90%-100% <br />PS&E. This task will include a Constructability Review <br />with the City that will take place at the 90% submittal. We <br />will perform similar page turns internally at 30% and 60%. <br />Please refer to the itemized Scope of Services and <br />deliverable list for more info on the construction <br />document phase as noted with the project schedule. <br />vi. Project Administration - As prime consultant, an on- <br />going role for us will be Project Management and Project <br />Administration as outlined in the RFP. Our design team will be led <br />by Barsin Bet Govargez PE and he will be Main Point of Contact <br />with the City. This vital task will include managing all aspects <br />of the project, issuing progress reports to the City keeping you <br />informed our progress on a regular basis, internal coordination <br />and quality control with rest of design team, and coordination <br />with various public agencies for various aspects of the scope. <br />This task will also include the following key responsibilities: <br />• Project Construction Costs — You have a budget for <br />these improvements and it will be fixed based on your total <br />soft costs + an agreed -too percentage of contingency to <br />include in the overall project construction estimate. This will <br />be part of a key deliverable, the "Estimate of Construction <br />Costs". We chose not to bring on a third party cost estimator <br />for this project. In our experience this isn't a project type <br />that is conducive to good estimating in that fashion. They <br />are better suited for larger projects with sizable construction <br />budgets that have an appreciable contingency amount. This <br />is a small project with a relatively small budget and we can't <br />afford any big misses on the construction estimate. Our <br />design team will be generating our own estimates for each <br />discipline. Using the City's approved format, we'll generate <br />a list of construction line items and include quantities, unit <br />costs, and totals for all parts of the construction scope. We'll <br />be using our years of experience building things along with <br />other reference data to generate our unit costs for each item. <br />Common reference data includes recent project construction <br />and actual construction costs we're seeing as our projects <br />get completed. Given everything that's going on in the world, <br />this is a great time to be building something. We're see good <br />pricing coming in on all of our public sector work mostly with <br />schools and universities. We also use 3rd Party reference <br />material such as the "Saylor 2020" for current construction <br />costs. This gives us confidence to provide you with good <br />unit costs for all the standard issue items that will need be <br />provided and installed such as ac paving, aggregate base, <br />planting and irrigation, etc. For more specialty items, such as <br />the re -built overlook deck, we'll look closely at previously built <br />projects that include similar types of improvement and built <br />construction. We'll also reach out to industry friends and get <br />some direct estimates based what they're seeing for similar <br />type construction. <br />Project Schedule — We feel the best way to ensure quality <br />is to expeditiously complete the project on a comprehensive, <br />aggressive timeline that isn't rushing but also isn't allowing <br />too much lag time between deadlines. When you push the <br />project too fast, you can miss things because there isn't <br />enough design effort and you're producing construction <br />documents before you really understand all facets of the <br />proposed construction. When you allow for too much time <br />during each phase it's easy to relax and not sweat deadlines. <br />We want to be active and engaged from beginning to end, <br />pressure is a good thing, how else would we get diamonds? <br />Teamwork - This will be a "team" effort and we are fortunate <br />that several key members of our team are in-house. Our Civil <br />Engineer and Landscape Architect will be the main project <br />leads and sit across from each other in the office. Our <br />Structural Engineer and Environmental Graphics are also <br />in-house with only the Electrical Engineer, Linwood, being <br />an outside subconsultant. And we've got a great relationship <br />with Linwood, having completed several different project <br />types with them over the years. Our approach to meeting your <br />expectations includes staying in constant communication <br />with the City and each member of our design team. We take <br />it upon ourselves to respond as quickly as we can to your <br />phone calls and emails, which typically is same day if not <br />within an hour or two. We will hold everyone on our team <br />accountable for deliverables at each milestone of the project <br />schedule. We'll keep a close eye on everyone, and if we find <br />that a member of our team is falling behind on a particular <br />phase of the project, we'll have a team meeting to discuss the <br />issue and make a plan to get back on track. Issues typically <br />develop because of a lack of communication and we create <br />an open line of discussion with the City and all our team <br />members to ensure that everyone is talking, more importantly <br />that everyone is heard. <br />14 CITY OF SANTA ANA: REP NO: 20130 <br />171" STREET TRIANGULAR PARK RESTORATION <br />