Source: https://arbitrationlaw.com/books/construction-schedules-analysis-evaluation-and-interpretation-schedules-litigation-and-dispute
Timestamp: 2018-06-23 13:31:05
Document Index: 466251986

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 3', '§ 3', '§ 3', '§ 3', '§ 3', '§ 3', '§ 4', '§ 5', '§ 5', '§ 5', '§ 5', '§ 7', '§ 7', '§ 7', '§ 7', '§ 7', '§ 7', '§ 7', '§ 7', '§ 7', 'art\n2012', '§ 3', '§ 3', '§ 3']

Construction Schedules: Analysis, Evaluation and Interpretation of Schedules in Litigation and Dispute Resolution - Fourth Edition | ArbitrationLaw.com
Construction Schedules: Analysis, Evaluation and Interpretation of Schedules in Litigation and Dispute Resolution - Fourth Edition
978-1-57823-320-5
The Fourth Edition of Construction Schedules examines the use of construction schedules in resolving disputes over contract time extensions and the economic consequences of such, and takes an in-depth look at the only lasting opinions that count in this litigious arena. These opinions are the ones expressed by the United States court system and other third party neutrals across the world.
§ 3-13(c) Opportunity to Cure before Termination for Failure to Progress
§ 3-13(d) Waiving the Right to Terminate
§ 3-14 Fast-Track, Design-Build Schedules
§ 3-15 The Schedule's Role in Procurement
§ 3-16 Schedules and Constructive Acceleration
§ 3-17 Recovery Schedules
§ 4-5 The Need for Standards and Ethics in Preparing and Analyzing Construction Schedules
§ 5-3(a) The Contemporaneous Method
§ 5-3(b) The What-If Method
§ 5-3(c) But-For or the Collapsed Method (BFM)
§ 5-3(d) The As-Built Method (ABM)
§ 7-1(a)(1) The ConsensusDOCS 200 2007 Standard Form
§ 7-1(a)(2) The ConsensusDOCS 300 2007 Standard Form
§ 7-1(a)(3) The AIA Standard Form A–201–2007
§ 7-1(a)(4) FIDIC 2005
§ 7-1(b)(4) Concealed or Unknown Conditions
§ 7-1(b)(5) To Demonstrate Delay
§ 7-1(b)(6) Termination
§ 7-1(b)(7) Resource Loading
§ 7-2(a) The ConsensusDOCS 750 2007 Standard Form Agreement between Contractor and Subcontractor
ILLUSTRATIONS AND EXHIBITS ON CD-ROM
Illustration 2.4 Bar Chart
2012 POCKET PART TABLE OF CONTENTS
§ 3-9(b)(3) Owner’s Liability for Cardinal Changes
§ 3-10(a) The Law’s View of Updates
§ 3-13 The Schedule’s Role in Termination
H. Murray Hohns, PE, Fellow ASCE, is a construction consultant, mediator and arbitrator in private practice. He has worked out of Honolulu since 1987. His specialty is construction delay, those responsible and its consequences. He founded Wagner-Hohns-Inglis-Inc in 1965 and built it into one of the country's 250 largest Consulting Engineers. He has two degrees in Civil Engineering and a MA in theology. He has written or contributed to eight books on dispute resolution, worked on projects in all 50 States and overseas, and managed major construction projects for their owners. He has written a monthly expert commentary for a compilation of reported construction cases for the past seven years. He is a former President of the Project Management Institute, the National Academy of Forensic Engineers and a member of the Board of Directors for the American Arbitration Association
Michael T. Callahan, Esq., is president of CCL Construction Consultants, Inc. He maintains an active consulting practice in the measurement and responsibility of delay, along with the quantification of additional performance costs and other construction and design-related matters. He has written or edited Termination of Construction and Design Contracts and Procurement of Design and Construction Contracts, Construction Change Order Claims 2nd Edition, and co-authored Construction Delays Claims; other books for other publishers; and prepares a monthly newsletter summarizing current design and construction case decisions, Construction Law Digest. He was an adjunct professor at the University of Kansas and has lectured throughout the United States, Europe, the Middle East, and Far East on design a nd construction related topics. He is a member of the Kansas, New Jersey, and Missouri bars by examination. Mr. Calla han is also a frequent arbitrator, negotiator, mediator, and a regional advisor to the American Arbitration Association.
"The Fourth Edition of Constuction Schedules is a welcome update to the Construction Industry.Construction Schedules has been a practical and useful guide to the practitioner in addressing construction delay claims. This treatise update will provide a much needed discussion of alternative scheduling methods. In light of recent case law that seems to open the door to alternative schedule analysis, Callahan's and Hohns' most recent effort should be a welcome library addition to Owners, Contractors, Designers and their counsel."
-H. James Wulfsberg, senior principal with Wulfsberg Reese Colvig & Firstman, and nationally recognized expert in construction law