Jason: IPD is a fundamental change in the contract agreements between an owner, an architect, engineers, and the contractor. It incentivizes collaboration to achieve a common goal. In fact, the contracts often include a set of goals that are agreed to by all parties. Everyone is rewarded if those goals are met. If sacrifices are determined to be necessary, all parties have to agree on how that needs to be solved. I think most folks assume that was always happening, but in some cases the contracts didn’t incentivize that level of collaboration and the building of consensus across all groups.
Jeffrey: There are so many hidden problems that come to the surface when you have poor coordination. And IPD can best be described as better coordination. One benefit of IPD is having a person on the project who coordinates with the design team and the engineers of record during the design phase to ensure everyone is aligned. That’s being done, but it’s often happening later in the process. IPD ensures it’s happening sooner during the design phase. It’s compressing what’s done over a longer period of time into a shorter, upfront period of time so that you don’t get deep into a project and realize not everyone is on the same page.