BCIS
Encyclopedia
The Building Cost Information Service, known as BCIS, is a leading provider of cost and price information for the UK construction industry. It is a part of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors
Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors
The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors is an independent, representative professional body which regulates property professionals and surveyors in the United Kingdom and other sovereign nations....

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BCIS Website

BCIS carries out statistical analysis of the UK Construction Industry as a basis for early project cost advice and Elemental Cost Planning. The BCIS website was launched in 1997 and has developed over the years to become a fully operational e-commerce website and information hub. The BCIS website offers the full BCIS product list of publications such as Wessex Price Books. Recently, online subscriptions to the key BCIS Online services have been made available on the website. The website is regularly updated with new products, services, blogs, news and press releases.

Elemental Cost Planning

BCIS was set up in 1961 to provide the profession with cost information in elemental format and to promote the use of elements and of elemental cost planning. 1951 saw the publication of the Ministry of Education Building Bulletin No 4 which essentially introduced the concept of elemental cost planning to the UK construction industry. Its Author was James Nisbet.

The preface to the Bulletin says that with the need for a great number of new schools, it is "essential to explore every possible means of reducing the cost, increasing the speed of school building whilst maintaining standards of quality and educational efficiency". The Bulletin described a "new approach towards a costing technique for use by architects and surveyors". In the intervening half century the UK quantity surveying profession have made the technique their own.
The key to this innovation was the concept of elements. Again, it is worth quoting from the bulletin:

"An architect tends to think in terms of functions and of the means by which he can perform those functions. For example, he sees as one function the exclusion of rain and weather and he looks to a roof to perform this task. It is, for the purposes of cost analysis, immaterial to him whether the roof be of timber and tiles or of concrete and asphalt. He is primarily concerned to know how much it has cost to roof in the building."

"Thus, where the estimator builds up his tender by adding together a large number of relatively small items, classified by trades, cost analysis must reverse this process and break down the tender into groups of material and labour classified according to the functions they perform. These groups have been described as elements."

Thus an element is defined as 'a part of a building that fulfils a specific function or functions irrespective of its design, specification or construction'.
The move from 'costing a design' to 'designing to a cost' and the development of cost planning techniques has served the profession well in offering value added services to clients. The concept of elements has been incorporated into the development of life cycle costing and value management. It has also spread around the globe and both the term and its definition are enshrined in national and international standards.

External links

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