Abstract

The recent notable emergence of a body of research in requirements management on one hand and benefits realisation has contributed to addressing a growing need for improved performance in Architecture, Engineering and Construction (AEC) projects. However, front end design (FED) as one of the vital processes in the project life cycle and delivery has attracted limited research to date within this understanding. This paper aims to map current evidence on requirements management in facilitating benefits realisation from an FED perspective. This is to bring about an updated and unified position on requirements management for its impact on design decision making. A systematic review of the literature covering the last ten years (2008–2018) aims first to build understanding and support identification of these emergent conceptual positions and secondly underscore essential requirements and their categorisations that impact on design discourse in FED. One hundred sixty-one peer-reviewed journal papers in the areas of benefits realisation and/or requirements management and/or FED based are identified on a pre-determined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Thirty-six requirements are identified as important in influencing use case changes important in design decision making broadly grouped into nine major categories. Following analysis, this research finds little evidence supporting an integrated requirements management practice and understanding to support design decision making. The research further finds bias in current research discourse towards four requirements categories (technical, economics, governance and environment); and 14 requirements, dominated by three strategic values, collaboration and project governance, with over 80% share of literature. The least 14 requirements such as “flow of spaces, social status/aspiration, mobility and integrated design” among others only account for less than 10% of literature. The authors argue for new research to bridge this gap, highlight the essential role of requirements management and broaden understanding to improve benefits realisation, particularly for FED processes.

Highlights

  • A significant part of project performance relates to how well projects deliver continuously on benefits in use, throughout its lifecycle

  • This study aims to advance the concept of benefits realisation in front end design (FED) processes of AEC

  • It is seen that benefits realisation as a concept is receiving limited focus in research, yet its practices and concepts can be key to project success

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Summary

Introduction

A significant part of project performance relates to how well projects deliver continuously on benefits in use (the perceived and derived benefits), throughout its lifecycle. Projects in a benefits realisation sense need to adequately capture, define, implement and evaluate their intended benefits continuously for better project performance [4,5]. Buildings 2020, 10, 83 harness organisational resources through planning and management in supporting change that delivers effectiveness and efficiencies in organisational processes for successful projects, programs and portfolios [5,7]. It is essential to highlight that at the heart of both benefits, realisation and requirements management is a change and control process that should support decision making. At the same time increasing complexity in user preferences means that planning and management of benefits need to keep pace through continually building new understanding and evolving practice during project delivery

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