You have recently been appointed by a large property investor in the UK who wishes to renovate a house. To keep his costs to a minimum he likes to have only one worker working on each activity. The property renovation involves various tasks which he estimates will take one worker the times shown in the table below:

 

You have recently been appointed by a large property investor in the UK who wishes to renovate a house. To keep his costs to a minimum he likes to have only one worker working on each activity. The property renovation involves various tasks which he estimates will take one worker the times shown in the table below:

Activity Time needed to complete
Substantial repairs to the roof 5 days
Internal structural work 7 days
Electrical work 5 days
Plumbing 2 days
Plastering 3 days
Installing a new kitchen 3 days
Installing a new bathroom 4 days
Internal decoration 6 days
Garden 4 days
Change windows 2 day
Fitting carpets 2 day
Outside paintwork 5 days

The roof and structural work must be completed before any other activities (inside or outside) can commence. Once these are done, the other tasks can happen at any stage. However, inside the house, the plumbing and electrics must be completed before the plastering can be done. The plastering must be complete before the new kitchen and bathroom can be installed. Decoration can only happen once the kitchen and bathroom are in place, and carpets can only be fitted after decorating. The windows have to be changed before the outside paintwork is started.
The property developer knows that to keep his budget on target, all work needs to be completed in 6 weeks. His team only works from Monday to Friday. Can it be done? Which activities is it most important for the property developer to keep on track?
The developer has several other projects on the go at the same time and decides that he can only spare two of his team to work on this project. By assigning activities to Worker 1 and Worker 2 show how this is possible.
There are three (3) parts to this assignment, and each is worth a percentage of the final assignment mark.
Part 1 – 30%
Create a network diagram with the critical path clearly marked
What are the advantages to the property developer in using critical path analysis to plan this project?
How realistic is the idea of using only two workers to complete the project given the deadline of six weeks?
You do not need any specialist knowledge of construction to answer this question.
Part 2 – 30%
Review the case above of The House with regard to risk management.
Identify at least 5 risks relevant to this project and create a simple risk table showing how you would manage these risks with appropriate risk controls
Discuss how you would derive a risk score for each of these risks explaining what evidence you could access to support you calculation of impact and probability
What are the opportunities available and how would you categorise these strategies?
Please note that you are being assessed on your understanding of risk management and not the discovery of the ‘correct answer’.
Part 3 – 40%
You have recently hired Kevin, a retired ex-lecturer in project management, to work as part of your project team on the house build. He is very good at solving technical project problems but seems to find working in the team very difficult and gives constant negative feedback on his co-workers. His performance and temper has become progressively worse over time. He seems to lack motivation and you may have to consider ending his employment. Why might Kevin lack motivation? Discuss with reference to appropriate theories and case examples; suggest ways in which Kevin may be motivated.

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