• This is not the engineers fault though.

      It is highly political projects, politicians offloaded their old friends and competitiors onto the boeards and other functions and in the case of the airport major planning was undertaken by a guy who is a technical drawer and not an engineer.

      Most of these fuck ups could have been prevent, if the project management was done by project managers with an engineering background and if the owners side would have been represented by peoplewith a technical backgrounds.

      Source: i have worked in civil engineering for public projects. We wasted 50% of the time explaining Politicians and MBA bros C-levels why they can’t start by building the roof and why replanning half the stuff is a bad idea, when we are already on the market with bids for contractors.

      • SinAdjetivos@beehaw.org
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        11 months ago

        For healthy working relationships and solid infrastructure you under-promise and over-deliver.

        For maximal profit and sustainable business models you over-promise and under-deliver.

        • 1993_toyota_camry@beehaw.org
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          11 months ago

          The company that under-promises won’t win the bid, though. Unfortunately the norm now is to overpromise, and then squeeze as many extra fees and concessions out of the project as possible.

          There’s also a culture of contractors vs engineers where limits willingness to work together to find solutions. “not my fault”.

      • interolivary@beehaw.org
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        11 months ago

        Well sure that’s fundamentally true, but really doesn’t give any sort of accurate picture of how estimates are done any more than “humans are just collections of cells” does, and anybody who does estimates without using some sort of data as the basis and is purely guessing is doing it wrong as fuck.

        It’s not like we have no idea how long certain tasks have taken in the past, or what affects how long something will take.