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Building economics : theory and practice / created by Rosalie T. Ruegg and Harold E. Marshall

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, 1990Description: xv, 486 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781475746907
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • TH437 RUE
Contents:
1 Methods of Economic Evaluation 1. Building Economics at a Glance 2. Life-Cycle Cost (LCC) 3. Net Benefit (NB) and Net Savings (NS) 4. Benefit-to-Cost Ratio (BCR) and Savings-to-Investment Ratio (SIR) 5. Internal Rate of Return (IRR) 6. Overall Rate of Return (ORR) 7. Payback (PB) 2 What You Need to Know to Apply the Methods 8. Adjusting Dollar Amounts for Time of Occurrence 9. Treatment of Price Changes 10. Setting the Study Period 11. Selecting a Discount Rate or MARR 12. Estimating Costs and Benefits 13. Accounting for Taxes and Financing 3 Techniques for Treating Uncertainty and Risk 14. Risk Exposure and Risk Attitude 15. Conservative Estimating, Breakeven Analysis, and Sensitivity Analysis 16. Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate and Certainty Equivalent Techniques 17. Decision Analysis, Simulation, and Other Techniques 18. Selecting the Best Technique 4 Applications of Economic Evaluation Methods and Risk Analysis Techniques 19. Selection of Building Designs and Building Components 20. Decision to Accept or Reject a Project 21. Decisions on Building Location 22. Lease or Buy Decisions 23. Economic Size of Building Components 24. Allocating Limited Budgets Among Competing Projects 25. Decisions on Timing of Equipment Replacements 26. Selecting Combinations of Interdependent Systems Appendixes A. Glossary B. Worksheets and Supporting Reference Tables for Computing Life-Cycle Costs, Net Savings, Savings-to-Investment Ratio, and Payback C. Graphs for Converting SPB to DPB D. Computer Programs E. Derivation of a Utility Function F. Guide to Published Sources of Data G. Discount Factor Tables Subject
Summary: We no longer build buildings like we used to nor do we pay for them in the same way. Buildings today are no longer only shelter but are also life support systems, communication terminals, data manufacturing centers, and much more. Buildings are incredibly expensive tools that must be constantly adjusted to function efficiently. The economics of building has become as complex as its design. When buildings were shelter they lasted longer than their builders. The av­ erage gothic master mason lived 35 or 40 years. Cathedrals took 3 or 4 hundred years to build. Cost estimates were verified by great great grandchildren of the original designer. Today, creative economics has become as important as creative design and creative building. The dient brings builder, contractor, architect, and facilities manager to account in their life time. The cost of building can therefore no longer be left to chance or act of god. Solutions are no longer as ingeniously simple as those proposed by a Flor­ entine builder early in the 15th century. He proposed to center the dome of S. Maria deI Fiore on a great mound of earth mixed with pennies. When the job was done street urchins would carry away the dirt in their search for the pennies. This was a serious suggestion offered by an early construction manager before Brunelleschi solved the problem more sensibly
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Main Library Open Shelf TH437 RUE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 160962 Available BK148940

Includes index

1 Methods of Economic Evaluation 1. Building Economics at a Glance 2. Life-Cycle Cost (LCC) 3. Net Benefit (NB) and Net Savings (NS) 4. Benefit-to-Cost Ratio (BCR) and Savings-to-Investment Ratio (SIR) 5. Internal Rate of Return (IRR) 6. Overall Rate of Return (ORR) 7. Payback (PB) 2 What You Need to Know to Apply the Methods 8. Adjusting Dollar Amounts for Time of Occurrence 9. Treatment of Price Changes 10. Setting the Study Period 11. Selecting a Discount Rate or MARR 12. Estimating Costs and Benefits 13. Accounting for Taxes and Financing 3 Techniques for Treating Uncertainty and Risk 14. Risk Exposure and Risk Attitude 15. Conservative Estimating, Breakeven Analysis, and Sensitivity Analysis 16. Risk-Adjusted Discount Rate and Certainty Equivalent Techniques 17. Decision Analysis, Simulation, and Other Techniques 18. Selecting the Best Technique 4 Applications of Economic Evaluation Methods and Risk Analysis Techniques 19. Selection of Building Designs and Building Components 20. Decision to Accept or Reject a Project 21. Decisions on Building Location 22. Lease or Buy Decisions 23. Economic Size of Building Components 24. Allocating Limited Budgets Among Competing Projects 25. Decisions on Timing of Equipment Replacements 26. Selecting Combinations of Interdependent Systems Appendixes A. Glossary B. Worksheets and Supporting Reference Tables for Computing Life-Cycle Costs, Net Savings, Savings-to-Investment Ratio, and Payback C. Graphs for Converting SPB to DPB D. Computer Programs E. Derivation of a Utility Function F. Guide to Published Sources of Data G. Discount Factor Tables Subject

We no longer build buildings like we used to nor do we pay for them in the same way. Buildings today are no longer only shelter but are also life support systems, communication terminals, data manufacturing centers, and much more. Buildings are incredibly expensive tools that must be constantly adjusted to function efficiently. The economics of building has become as complex as its design. When buildings were shelter they lasted longer than their builders. The av­ erage gothic master mason lived 35 or 40 years. Cathedrals took 3 or 4 hundred years to build. Cost estimates were verified by great great grandchildren of the original designer. Today, creative economics has become as important as creative design and creative building. The dient brings builder, contractor, architect, and facilities manager to account in their life time. The cost of building can therefore no longer be left to chance or act of god. Solutions are no longer as ingeniously simple as those proposed by a Flor­ entine builder early in the 15th century. He proposed to center the dome of S. Maria deI Fiore on a great mound of earth mixed with pennies. When the job was done street urchins would carry away the dirt in their search for the pennies. This was a serious suggestion offered by an early construction manager before Brunelleschi solved the problem more sensibly

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