Latent Building Defects: Causes and Design Strategies to Prevent Them
Publication: Journal of Performance of Constructed Facilities
Volume 20, Issue 3
Abstract
Building designers’ decisions affect long term quality and life cycle cost of buildings. Designers’ decisions are usually latent in nature and hard to detect at the early stage of construction. This research looks at failure mechanisms that caused design-related latent defects and the design parameters that could prevent these defects. A 9-month building survey on 74 buildings found that the three most important design-related failure causes were weather impact, impacts from occupants, and loads and moisture from the wet areas. Insufficient considerations for these failures causes were found to be the key in preventing these defects. The design strategies that could successfully prevent triggering these defects include aligning material performance against adverse weather conditions, preventing impacts from occupants and loads, preventing water leakage, improving specifications and improving design clarity, details, and layout. There are huge amount of standards and codes available internationally, however, each is designed specifically to overcome regional problems. This research confirms the need for designers to (1) consolidate regional standards and codes; (2) develop in-house database using existing standards and codes, and lesson-learned from defects gathered by property managers; and (3) to apply this knowledge to eliminate latent defects from future design. This research also confirms that such knowledge can be developed using existing records of property managers.
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© 2006 ASCE.
History
Received: Oct 26, 2004
Accepted: Jul 28, 2005
Published online: Aug 1, 2006
Published in print: Aug 2006
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