Abstract

The concept of ‘Lock-In’, or the escalating cost of overcommitment on a project to a failing course of action, has unforeseeable implications in project management. This paper presents a case study on the occurrence and consequences of lock-in within the context of public sector housing projects in a small island developing state (SIDS). It demonstrates that cost overruns continue beyond the commissioning phase and throughout the project’s lifecycle, even though technical contingencies were implemented to deliver the intended project benefits. The findings unpack the implications of political expediency as a strategic tool mobilised to supersede proper technical decision-making prior to project execution. It concludes that project practitioners’ commitment to select and continue with a sub-optimal project can lead to the implementation of ineffective solutions to justify their actions, resulting in failed outcomes with negative social consequences. This research helps to advance project management knowledge in the us-er/operation phase, because previous scholarly work was limited to investigating lock-in from project conceptualisation to the commissioning phase.

Highlights

  • Social infrastructure development projects (SIDPs), such as public housing, often begin with noble intentions of delivering beneficial outcomes to society

  • A similar bespoke agreement was awarded to Contractor 2 in 2008, work commenced in 2007, for approximately the and Tobago dollars (TTD) 97.5 million

  • The case study demonstrates that strategic opportunities arose due to political pressures, resulting in escalating commitment which led to lock-in before actual project conceptualisation was completed

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Social infrastructure development projects (SIDPs), such as public housing, often begin with noble intentions of delivering beneficial outcomes to society. The utility derived from low-income housing delivery has proven to be advantageous, positively influencing social dynamism and affecting economic growth [1]. The reversal of derived benefits can fester, and the intended community absorbs a consequential shortfall of benefits. Through ill-conceived initiatives, such social projects fall short of baselined project metrics such as time, cost, and quality. Compromise on the realisation of intended benefits occurs during delivery [2]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call