GN-CD-05

Value Engineering Support

1.0 — April 2026Review April 2027RICS-regulated QS firms (England & Wales)

Purpose

Value Engineering (VE) is the systematic process of achieving the required functions and performance of a building at the minimum whole-life cost, without compromising quality, safety or statutory compliance. At RIBA Stage 2, the QS plays a central role in the VE process: providing elemental cost data from Cost Plan 1, identifying high-cost elements relative to BCIS benchmarks, quantifying the cost implications of alternative design options, and preparing comparative analyses to support design team decision-making.

Stage 2 is the most cost-effective point in the RIBA plan of work to undertake VE. Design variables are still fluid, decisions can be reversed with minimal abortive work, and every £1 of cost saving identified at Stage 2 costs a fraction of the abortive design cost that would be incurred making the same change at Stage 4 or later. RICS Value Management and Value Engineering (2nd edition, 2017) confirms that the value improvement potential declines sharply beyond Stage 3.

Critically, VE is not a cost-cutting exercise. Its purpose is to optimise the ratio of function to whole-life cost — a VE proposal may legitimately recommend an increase in capital cost where whole-life savings are demonstrably greater. The QS must present both the capital and whole-life cost implications of every VE option to enable the client to make a genuinely informed decision.

Key Principles

  • RICS Value Management and Value Engineering (2nd edition, 2017): the primary RICS guidance note defining the VE process, the QS role, workshop methodology and reporting requirements in the UK construction context.
  • BS EN 12973:2020 — Value Management: European standard defining value management principles, function analysis, and the relationship between value, function and cost.
  • RICS Whole Life Costing (1st edition, 2016): VE proposals must be assessed for whole-life cost impact, not just capital cost — this is a fundamental RICS obligation at Stage 2.
  • NRM 1: Order of Cost Estimating and Cost Planning (2nd edition, 2012): the Cost Plan 1 elemental structure is the primary tool for identifying VE targets and quantifying proposed savings.
  • HM Treasury Value for Money guidance (2021): public sector projects must demonstrate VFM across the whole life of the asset; VE at Stage 2 is a key mechanism for achieving this.
  • Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 (CDM 2015): VE proposals must not compromise the CDM hierarchy of risk control or introduce new design hazards.
  • RIBA Plan of Work 2020 — Stage 2 Concept Design: identifies the VE review as a Stage 2 gateway deliverable before design development proceeds to Stage 3.

Practical Application

Step 1
Prepare the VE analysis from Cost Plan 1: identify all Group Elements where the elemental unit rate (EUR) exceeds the BCIS benchmark by more than 10–15%, or where the element's cost as a percentage of construction cost is above the BCIS norm for the building type. These are the primary VE targets.
Step 2
Brief the design team on VE targets before the workshop. Circulate Cost Plan 1 elemental summary and BCIS benchmark comparison. Request each designer to identify potential specification alternatives for their high-cost elements before the workshop.
Step 3
Facilitate or support the VE workshop. For each VE proposal, establish: (i) the function it serves; (ii) the capital cost impact; (iii) the whole-life cost impact; (iv) any quality, risk or programme implications; (v) compliance with statutory requirements (CDM, Building Regulations, planning conditions).
Step 4
Quantify the cost impact of each VE option. Use Cost Plan 1 elemental rates and quantities as the baseline. Apply BCIS data for alternative specifications. For complex proposals, prepare a preliminary cost model with stated assumptions.
Step 5
Prepare a VE option appraisal table for each proposal: columns should include Option, Description, Capital Cost (£), LCC NPV (£), Total Value Impact (£), Quality/Risk Rating and Recommendation (Accept/Reject/Further Study).
Step 6
Present the VE appraisal table to the client with the QS recommendation. The recommendation must clearly state whether the proposal is recommended on whole-life cost grounds, not just capital cost.
Step 7
Update Cost Plan 1 to reflect all accepted VE decisions. Issue a Cost Plan 1 (Revision 1) with a VE schedule summarising accepted proposals, savings achieved and the revised elemental budget.
Step 8
Document all rejected VE proposals with the reasons for rejection. This record is essential for audit purposes — demonstrating that VE was properly considered — and for future reference if the brief changes at a later stage.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Focusing solely on capital cost savings without assessing whole-life cost impact — a VE proposal that reduces capital cost but increases maintenance or energy costs may deliver negative value over the asset's life.
  • Allowing VE proposals to compromise statutory requirements — no VE saving justifies reducing fire compartmentation below Building Regulations standards, reducing accessibility below Part M requirements, or removing CDM-required protection measures.
  • Failing to document rejected VE options — without a documented rejection record, the audit trail is incomplete and the design team may be unable to demonstrate that VE was properly considered.
  • Introducing VE proposals after Stage 3 — at Stage 4, design changes trigger abortive drawing, engineering and procurement costs that can substantially exceed the proposed saving. VE after Stage 3 gateway must be formally justified.
  • Treating VE as an emergency budget reduction measure rather than a structured design optimisation exercise — reactive cost-cutting without function analysis does not constitute VE and risks specification quality.
  • Presenting VE proposals to the client without whole-life cost data — the client cannot make an informed decision between options if only capital costs are shown.

APC Competency & Quick Reference

APC Competencies: Value Management (L2) | Design Economics & Cost Planning (L2) | Cost Management (L2) | Life Cycle Costing (L1)

What is the difference between value engineering and cost-cutting?
Value engineering is the systematic optimisation of the ratio of function to whole-life cost. It may recommend an increase in capital cost where operational savings are greater. Cost-cutting simply reduces expenditure, potentially at the expense of quality, function or compliance. VE without function analysis is not VE — it is cost reduction.
How does the QS contribute to a VE workshop?
The QS provides the Cost Plan 1 elemental breakdown, identifies high-cost elements relative to BCIS benchmarks (the primary VE targets), quantifies the capital and whole-life cost impact of each VE proposal, prepares the VE option appraisal table, and updates Cost Plan 1 to reflect accepted decisions.
At what point in the RIBA plan of work is VE most effective?
VE is most effective at Stage 2 (Concept Design) and early Stage 3 (Spatial Coordination). RICS guidance confirms that value improvement potential declines sharply once design is developed — post-Stage 3 VE is constrained by abortive design costs, and post-Stage 4 VE is rarely cost-effective.

Value Engineering Support Checklist

Cost Plan 1 EUR comparison against BCIS benchmarks prepared (VE targets identified)
Design team briefed on VE targets before workshop
VE workshop facilitated/supported with elemental cost data
Capital cost impact quantified for each VE proposal
Whole-life cost (LCC) impact assessed for each VE proposal
Quality, risk and statutory compliance checked for each proposal
VE option appraisal table prepared with QS recommendation
Client briefed and decisions recorded in writing
Cost Plan 1 updated to reflect accepted VE decisions (issued as Revision 1)
Rejected VE proposals documented with reasons (for audit trail)

CPD Learning Outcomes

  • Apply value engineering methodology at RIBA Stage 2 to identify VE targets from elemental cost data and facilitate structured design option appraisals incorporating capital and whole-life cost.
  • Prepare a VE option appraisal table incorporating capital cost saving, LCC NPV impact, quality/risk rating and QS recommendation in compliance with RICS Value Management and Value Engineering guidance.
  • Distinguish between value engineering (function-driven, whole-life cost optimisation) and cost reduction (capital-only), and advise clients and design teams accordingly within the RICS professional framework.

Further Reading

  • RICS Value Management and Value Engineering (2nd edition, 2017, RICS Books)
  • RICS Whole Life Costing (1st edition, 2016, RICS Books)
  • BS EN 12973:2020 — Value Management (BSI)
  • RICS NRM 1: Order of Cost Estimating and Cost Planning (2nd edition, 2012, RICS Books)
  • HM Treasury Green Book: Central Government Guidance on Appraisal and Evaluation (2022, HM Treasury)
  • RIBA Plan of Work 2020 (RIBA Publishing)
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