BadgerEngineer
Structural
- Sep 16, 2008
- 43
Recently our firm put together a structural proposal for a 30 story office, retail, mixed use high rise in the US. Total square footage is around 700,000 with about 100,000 of that being parking The structure is rather high end – Post Tension Floors, Concrete Frame, Deep Foundations, high seismic, high wind, etc. However, most floor plates are fairly uniform.
My questions is – not knowing a construction cost, how would you price this project for the structural design. For simplicity, assume site visits, inspections, etc are not included in the fee. The reason I ask is because in the past our firm has typically been known as winning projects due to our very low fees. However, we were told with this project that we were under-bid by a very large firm who does high-end work around the world. I'm not sure I'm simply getting thrown a line or if we were really underbid. If the ladder is the case – I am concerned that the economic downturn has dramatically shifted a lot of firms pricing methods.
How would you price this project knowing only the above? Where are your firms structural fees falling on the per sq ft pricing? I realize this varies greatly by building type, location, etc.
All comments appreciated.
My questions is – not knowing a construction cost, how would you price this project for the structural design. For simplicity, assume site visits, inspections, etc are not included in the fee. The reason I ask is because in the past our firm has typically been known as winning projects due to our very low fees. However, we were told with this project that we were under-bid by a very large firm who does high-end work around the world. I'm not sure I'm simply getting thrown a line or if we were really underbid. If the ladder is the case – I am concerned that the economic downturn has dramatically shifted a lot of firms pricing methods.
How would you price this project knowing only the above? Where are your firms structural fees falling on the per sq ft pricing? I realize this varies greatly by building type, location, etc.
All comments appreciated.