Abstract:
Mega Projects play a significant role in the UK construction industry. They provide infrastructure, business
and employment opportunities for the nation. They are complex, and involve considerably high cost, and
risk. Therefore, through-life risk management practices are considered as a mandatory consideration in
mega projects. These risks arise in externally (political, economic, social, technological, environmental,
legal, etc.) and/or internally (project, stakeholders, etc.), and the influence of such risks leads to a
substantial cost overruns. Therefore, such risks need to be managed efficiently to endorse the project
success. This study investigates the through-life risk management strategies that are adopted in the UK
Mega Projects.
A literature review, four semi-structured interviews and a structured online questionnaire survey were the
methods used to collect data. Interview data was analysed through NVivo and appropriate themes were
developed. This was compared with the survey findings and conclusions were drawn accordingly. The
findings explain that through-life risk management is a mandatory requirement in mega projects, and design
and economic risk are the two most significant project risks that need to be addressed in advance. However
environmental risks also play an important pre-requisite role in mega projects. Findings further explain
risk register as a mandatory requirement for mega projects, which provides the opportunity for the project
to keep track of all risk whether they have happened, will happened or currently happen.
Citation:
Manewa, A., Muza, T., Siriwardena, M., & Ross, A. (2017). Through-life risk management in mega projects. In Y.G. Sandanayake, T. Ramachandra & S. Gunatilake (Eds.), What’s new and what’s next in the built environment sustainability agenda? (pp. 458-465). Ceylon Institute of Builders. https://ciobwcs.com/downloads/WCS2017-Proceedings.pdf