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Reforming project management: the role of lean construction

Howell, GA; Koskela, LJ

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Authors

GA Howell

LJ Koskela



Abstract

Project management as taught by professional societies and applied in current practice must be reformed because it is inadequate today and its performance will continue to decline as projects become more uncertain, complex and pressed for speed. Project management is failing because of flawed assumptions and idealized theory: it rests on a
faulty understanding of the nature or work in projects, and a deficient definition of control. It is argued that a reform of project management will be driven by theories from
production management that add the management of workflow and the creation and delivery of value to the current emphasis on activities. Of all the approaches to production
management, the theory and principles drawn from Lean Production seem to be best suited for project management. Promising results in this regard have been reached already in one project management area, namely in Lean Construction.

Citation

Howell, G., & Koskela, L. Reforming project management: the role of lean construction. Presented at 8th Annual Conference of the International Group for Lean Construction, Brighton, UK

Presentation Conference Type Other
Conference Name 8th Annual Conference of the International Group for Lean Construction
Conference Location Brighton, UK
End Date Jul 19, 2000
Publication Date Jul 17, 2000
Deposit Date Jun 30, 2010
Publicly Available Date Apr 5, 2016
Keywords Project Management, Lean Production, Theory, Construction
Additional Information Event Type : Conference
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