KM
Mechanical
- Mar 27, 2000
- 64
Our internal audit folks just told us our project files were a mess.
I'm in the government in a department that does a lot of heavy civil construction. Some of the design is in-house, some by another government department, and most by consultants. Construction supervision is either in-house or by consultants. There's a lot of email and electronic stuff, but a surprising amount of paper as well (particularly once construction is underway).
I'm supposed to come up with a proposal for standardizing our filing system---what to keep, who keeps it, for how long, etc.
Google has only been marginally helpful: too vague on "Information Management" in general. The departmental records people are working at a level way above this problem: this would be a sub-sub-sub category of the stuff they work on.
So, does any one know of any "standards" specifically for construction project documentation---from project initiation through to final completion?
We would all be better off if we tried to be better, instead of trying to be better-off. --Aristide Pierre (Peter) Maurin
I'm in the government in a department that does a lot of heavy civil construction. Some of the design is in-house, some by another government department, and most by consultants. Construction supervision is either in-house or by consultants. There's a lot of email and electronic stuff, but a surprising amount of paper as well (particularly once construction is underway).
I'm supposed to come up with a proposal for standardizing our filing system---what to keep, who keeps it, for how long, etc.
Google has only been marginally helpful: too vague on "Information Management" in general. The departmental records people are working at a level way above this problem: this would be a sub-sub-sub category of the stuff they work on.
So, does any one know of any "standards" specifically for construction project documentation---from project initiation through to final completion?
We would all be better off if we tried to be better, instead of trying to be better-off. --Aristide Pierre (Peter) Maurin