01 Jun 2016 | 03:10 pm | 2 min. read
- Decisive, strong leadership must drive collaboration - Cultural shift crucial to boost collaboration and efficiencies - Launch event on 6 June
Decisive leadership and an overhaul of contractual structures, procurement processes and behaviours are crucial to embracing collaborative practices in order to drive greater efficiency across the construction industry, says international law firm Pinsent Masons.
In the firm's inaugural report 'Collaborative Construction: More Myth than Reality?' construction experts outline a critical need for a cultural shift to ensure collaborative disciplines are adopted across the industry.
Launching at an event at Pinsent Masons in London next week (6 June), the report highlights a number of barriers to collaborative construction. These include the view that collaborative methods will be more costly, time consuming and resource hungry as well as inertia prompted by reluctance to adopt new practices and a lack of leadership promoting industry-wide best practice.
To overcome these barriers the report makes a number of recommendations to drive change. These include:
Construction Partner, Martin Roberts, said: "As the demand for construction and infrastructure services increases, procurers and suppliers are looking at delivery structures which will provide not only sustainable, long term value to the procurers but also, more consistent, better margins for contractors, supply chain members and professional teams”.
"As BIM and data management technology drives new approaches to the design and construction process, the need to replace traditional competitive procurement and tendering processes with more collaborative structures and arrangements becomes ever more acute”.
"This report strikes at the heart of the complex dynamics surrounding these issues and points the way towards a more collaborative future."
Commenting on the report, president of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Sir John Armitt, said: "There is now a general recognition especially in civil engineering that strong client leadership together with design and build and collaboration between the parties is the best approach. As the report makes clear there are a variety of contractual structures and approaches which can work but none will work without leadership from the client and collaboration and trust between all the parties. It is not easy but without it the industry will not deliver value for money”
"Contractual structures which support and enhance a more collaborative working environment and reduce the scope for conflict must be the way forward."
“I agree with the view that whilst government can, of course, play its part, it is the major industry clients and their advisers who are best positioned to lead the change agenda”
Founding Director of Cast Real Estate and Construction Consultancy, Mark Farmer, said:
“As Pinsent Masons’ report highlights, collaboration sits at the heart of the industry’s ability to modernise….what we now need is multi–party leadership to make this a mainstream reality for UK construction not just an exemplar approach adopted by government and a few forward thinking private sector clients.”
For more information about the report and the launch event please contact Martin Roberts ([email protected]) or Nigel Blundell ([email protected])
Key Contacts
Multinational law firm Pinsent Masons has advised the University of Greenwich on the trailblazing merger with the University of Kent, paving the way for the creation of the UK’s first “super‑university”.
Multinational law firm Pinsent Masons has advised on the sale of VLocker, a global leader in the design, manufacture, installation and management of electronic locker systems, to Venu+, a United States‑based portfolio company of private equity fund ZCG.
Multinational law firm Pinsent Masons is expanding its European footprint into Poland, announcing plans to open in Warsaw in mid-2026.
Multinational law firm Pinsent Masons has advised Royal London Asset Management Property on its acquisition of Fradley Park, a major industrial estate in Lichfield, West Midlands, in a £197 million off-market transaction.
Multinational law firm Pinsent Masons has been appointed by The Hong Kong Institute of Architects, Hong Kong Institute of Construction Managers and The Hong Kong Institute of Surveyors to assist with the drafting of a new generation of the standard forms of building works contracts for Hong Kong last updated in 2005/2006.
Multinational law firm Pinsent Masons has been recognised in the Projects Deal of the Year category of the China Business Law Journal’s (CBLJ) Deals of the Year 2023 list for the firm’s work on the landmark NEOM Smart City Project in Saudi Arabia.
For all media enquiries, including arranging an interview with one of our spokespeople, please contact the press office on
Location contacts
Europe: [email protected]
Asia: [email protected]
Middle East: [email protected]
Australia: [email protected]