Analysis of Liquidated Damages Provisions of Highway Standard Specifications in the USA
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Muiruri, Kevin Mbugua
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Abstract
A construction schedule is a plan outlining the order and timing of the activities ofconstruction in a project. Specifications may stipulate a course of action or penalties if the
progress of work falls short of the defined Schedule.
To ensure uniform state-wide guidelines in construction, each Department of Transportation
(DOT) developed a set of Standard Specifications throughout the United States of America.
The analysis of Standard Specifications developed by DOTs in each State reveals stark
differences in their implementation of schedule requirements and the consequences of nonconformance
to the schedules.
This research work investigates the scheduling provisions implemented by all the state DOTs.
Using content analysis and statistical analysis, the research objectives are to identify the
various forms of schedule non-conformances, consequences of non-conformances, and
Liquidated Damages as specified in all 50 Department of Transportation Standard
Specifications. The data obtained from the review are analyzed and put into charts and tables
to show how the states differed or agreed on the non-conformances, LDs, and the impact of
non-conformance. Descriptive and regression analyses of the states' liquidated damages are
undertaken to show the various data points, the ranges of liquidated damages, and to uncover
an LD model that captures the estimated LDs charges from aggregated
Description
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2022
