Existing industry bodies such as the
Construction Industry Board,
Construction Best Practice Programme and the
Design Build Foundation incorporated the Egan agenda into their activities, and were augmented by a new industry organisation, the
Movement for Innovation. These national level organisations were tasked with application of the ideas of
Rethinking Construction through ‘demonstration projects’, and regional ‘cluster groups’ or best practice clubs (these initiatives continue today under the auspices of
Constructing Excellence). In March 1999, the UK government's
Achieving Excellence in Construction initiative was launched to improve the performance - as industry clients - of central government departments, executive agencies and non-departmental public bodies. The initiative set out a route map with performance targets under four headings: management, measurement, standardisation and integration. Targets included the use of partnering and development of long-term relationships. Against this background, other government departments began to recognise the impact partnering could make and to promote the approach (e.g.:
CABE/
HM Treasury 2000,
National Audit Office 2001). In July 2001, as successor to both the earlier Task Force and the CIB, the
Strategic Forum for Construction was set up by ministers under the chairmanship of Sir John Egan. On 12 September 2002 it published
Accelerating Change, a report on its first year of activity. This report also underlined the potential importance of information technology in achieving greater integration, and set the tone for future UK government initiatives, notably the drive from 2010 onwards under
chief construction adviser Paul Morrell to implement
building information modelling on all UK public sector construction projects. The Egan Report was one of the influences that fed into the early syllabus of the
Interdisciplinary Design for the Built Environment programme at the
University of Cambridge. ==References==