Technical Studies & Quantity Surveying for Projects
Technical studies, quantity surveying, and scope review before procurement or execution, helping teams fix critical items early and reduce wasteful changes.
How the Technical Study Starts
We start by collecting available drawings, requirement notes, site photos, or an initial item list, then organize them into a clear scope instead of treating them as scattered remarks. This approach helps fix areas, quantities, and relationships between work items early and gives decision-makers a clearer base before procurement, tendering, or requesting additional quotations.
- Collect available client or site inputs.
- Define high-priority items before financial commitment.
- Expose unclear or missing data early.
Outputs That Support Procurement and Execution
The technical study should not stop at quantity estimation alone; it needs to produce a practical output that supports option comparison, quotation requests, and clear phase-by-phase material needs. When outputs are structured this way, the transition to procurement or execution becomes smoother and less vulnerable to clashes between site conditions, materials, and the schedule.
- Preliminary or detailed quantity sheets.
- Phase-based prioritization of work items.
- Notes that support option comparison.
Why It Matters for Decision-Makers
This service gives project owners and contractors more control before making rushed decisions, especially on multi-item works or sites where supply and execution overlap. The clearer the picture is at the start, the less likely the project is to need costly corrections or change orders caused by weak early assessment.
- Reduce risk before procurement.
- Support more realistic budgeting.
- Cut emergency revisions during execution.
Study Levels We Can Deliver
| Level Focus Output | ||
|---|---|---|
| Initial review | Define scope and critical items | Clear requirement summary |
| Quantity survey | Lengths, areas, and key quantities | Preliminary or detailed BOQ |
| Execution review | Sequencing, clashes, and risk points | Pre-execution notes |
Process Steps
- 1
Input Review
We review available drawings, photos, or operational needs and define the required study level.
- 2
Scope Analysis
We organize work items and their relationships, identifying critical points and unclear areas before final sheets are prepared.
- 3
Output Preparation
We prepare the study in a practical format that includes quantities, item lists, or recommendations supporting procurement or execution.
- 4
Review and Alignment
We review the outputs with the client or contractor to confirm priorities and update items before the next phase.