GN-SC-00

Introduction To The Spatial Coordination Stage

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

Purpose

RIBA Stage 3 Spatial Coordination is the stage at which the architectural concept is tested and resolved in three dimensions, structural and building services strategies are coordinated with the architectural layout, and the project design is developed to a level of detail sufficient to freeze key spatial decisions before technical design begins. For the QS, this stage produces Formal Cost Plan 2 — a measurably more robust cost assessment than Cost Plan 1, based on developed drawings, coordinated engineer's information, and substantially reduced design contingency.

The QS's cost management obligations at Stage 3 span all five principal work streams: developing Cost Plan 2 from the spatially coordinated design, completing a detailed Value Engineering review, updating the Risk Register with quantified risk allowances, refreshing the Cash Flow Forecast against a developed construction programme, and deepening the Life Cycle Costing analysis to sub-elemental and component level. The procurement strategy must also be finalised at Stage 3 to enable procurement activities to commence at Stage 4.

Stage 3 is the last practical opportunity to make significant design changes without generating substantial abortive work. The QS plays a critical gatekeeping role: if Cost Plan 2 demonstrates that the developed design exceeds the approved budget, the design team must resolve the gap before Stage 3 is closed and Stage 4 technical design proceeds.

Key Principles

  • NRM 1: RICS New Rules of Measurement — Order of Cost Estimating and Cost Planning (2nd edition, 2012, effective January 2013), Parts 3 and 4: measurement rules for Formal Cost Plan 2 at Stage 3, with greater elemental detail than Stage 2.
  • BCIS Elemental Standard Form of Cost Analysis (SFCA, 4th edition): consistent elemental definitions for cost plan benchmarking; TPI and location factor adjustments for cost data currency and comparability.
  • RICS Cost Prediction (Professional Statement, 1st edition, effective 1 July 2021): mandatory requirements for cost prediction reporting, including stated assumptions, uncertainty ranges, reasons for change from previous cost plan, and ICMS alignment.
  • RICS Value Management and Value Engineering (1st edition, 2017): Stage 3 VE review addresses tactical design optimisation at elemental and sub-elemental level, with whole-life cost analysis of alternatives.
  • RICS Management of Risk (1st edition, 2020): updated risk quantification at Stage 3 applies Monte Carlo simulation and three-point estimating to derive defensible risk allowances from the developed design.
  • RICS Whole Life Costing (1st edition, 2016) and PD 156865 Standardised Method of Life Cycle Costing (BSI/BCIS, 2008): Stage 3 LCC deepens to sub-elemental and component level as M&E, façade and structural specifications are confirmed.
  • RIBA Plan of Work 2020 — Stage 3 Spatial Coordination: gateway deliverables include a coordinated design, Stage 3 cost plan, updated project programme and procurement strategy.

Practical Application

Step 1
Review Cost Plan 1 and the Stage 2 Risk Register. Prepare a cost variance schedule identifying any change between Cost Plan 1 and the current design, and classify each variance as: design development, scope change, market movement or client-directed change.
Step 2
Prepare Formal Cost Plan 2 using NRM 1 Part 3 measurement rules. At Stage 3, elemental quantities should be measured from coordinated drawings; elemental unit rates should be derived from BCIS data (adjusted for TPI and location) and cross-checked against Stage 2 elemental allocations.
Step 3
Set the Stage 3 design contingency: typically 5–10% of construction cost, reduced from the 10–15% carried at Stage 2 to reflect increased design certainty. Document the basis for the contingency rate selected.
Step 4
Complete a VE review session with the design team, targeting elements where Cost Plan 2 EURs still exceed BCIS benchmarks. Prepare a VE option appraisal for each proposal, including capital cost saving, LCC impact and quality/risk assessment.
Step 5
Update the Risk Register: re-score all Stage 2 risks against the developed design, remove resolved risks, and add new risks identified through spatial coordination. Apply quantified risk analysis (three-point estimating or Monte Carlo simulation) for high-value risks.
Step 6
Deepen the Life Cycle Costing assessment to sub-elemental level: confirm component specifications, life expectancies and maintenance cycles for M&E, façade and key structural elements. Prepare an updated NPV comparison for any outstanding specification choices.
Step 7
Update the Cash Flow Forecast against the Stage 3 construction programme (which should now reflect a more developed sequencing plan). Apply BCIS TPI tender inflation and construction inflation adjustments using the confirmed base date and anticipated tender return date.
Step 8
Finalise the procurement strategy: confirm the contract form, tendering method and packaging strategy. Issue the Stage 3 Cost Plan 2 report with all updated appendices (Risk Register, LCC summary, Cash Flow Forecast, VE schedule, assumptions register and OCE/CP1/CP2 cost movement schedule). Obtain client sign-off.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Issuing Cost Plan 2 without a cost movement schedule reconciling it to Cost Plan 1 — the RICS Cost Prediction Professional Statement (2021) makes this a mandatory requirement.
  • Maintaining Stage 2 contingency levels (10–15%) at Stage 3 without justification — design contingency should reduce as design information matures; carrying excessive contingency masks genuine cost overruns.
  • Closing Stage 3 without resolving a Cost Plan 2 budget overrun — proceeding to technical design with an unresolved cost gap commits the client to further abortive design cost if changes are later required.
  • Treating the Stage 3 VE review as a repeat of Stage 2 VE — Stage 3 VE should focus on sub-elemental specification detail and coordination interfaces not addressed at Stage 2.
  • Not finalising the procurement strategy at Stage 3 — a delayed procurement decision at Stage 4 compresses the pre-tender period and may force sub-optimal route selection under time pressure.
  • Failing to update the Risk Register and LCC assessment — carrying forward Stage 2 documents unchanged to a Stage 3 report undermines the audit trail and the QS's professional obligations.

APC Competency & Quick Reference

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

What is Formal Cost Plan 2 and how does it differ from Cost Plan 1?
Formal Cost Plan 2 is the Stage 3 cost plan, prepared from spatially coordinated drawings using NRM 1 Part 3 measurement rules. It carries more measured elemental quantities and a lower design contingency (5–10%) than Cost Plan 1 (10–15%), reflecting greater design certainty. A cost movement schedule reconciling CP2 to CP1 is mandatory under RICS Cost Prediction (2021).
What does the RICS Cost Prediction Professional Statement (2021) require?
It requires the QS to: produce a cost prediction appropriate for project size and stage; state change from the previous cost plan and reasons; identify key assumptions, exclusions and methodology; provide an estimate of accuracy/uncertainty commensurate with project size; and recommend ICMS reporting format where in the client's best interests.
Why is Stage 3 the last effective point for major design change?
After Stage 3 gateway, technical design begins and design team fee commitments intensify. Design changes post-Stage 3 trigger abortive drawing, engineering and coordination work. RICS Value Management and VE guidance confirms that the cost of change increases sharply beyond Stage 3, making it the practical last gateway for resolving design/budget misalignment.

Spatial Coordination Stage Checklist

Cost movement schedule prepared (CP1 to current design)
Formal Cost Plan 2 prepared using NRM 1 Part 3 measurement rules
Stage 3 design contingency set and basis documented (typically 5–10%)
VE review completed with option appraisal table prepared
Risk Register updated with quantified risk analysis (3-point/Monte Carlo)
Life Cycle Costing deepened to sub-elemental/component level
Cash Flow Forecast updated against Stage 3 programme with TPI/inflation adjustments
Procurement strategy finalised (contract form, tendering method, packaging)
Cost Plan 2 report issued with all appendices and client sign-off obtained
Stage 3 gateway confirmed: budget surplus or overrun resolved before Stage 4 proceeds

CPD Learning Outcomes

  • Explain the QS role, key deliverables and gatekeeping obligations at RIBA Stage 3 Spatial Coordination.
  • Identify the differences between Formal Cost Plan 1 (Stage 2) and Formal Cost Plan 2 (Stage 3) in terms of measurement detail, contingency level and mandatory reporting requirements under RICS Cost Prediction (2021).
  • Describe how risk quantification, LCC analysis, procurement strategy and VE reviews are developed and deepened at Stage 3 relative to Stage 2.

Further Reading

  • RICS NRM 1: Order of Cost Estimating and Cost Planning (2nd edition, 2012, RICS Books) — Parts 3 and 4
  • RICS Cost Prediction (Professional Statement, 1st edition, effective 1 July 2021, RICS)
  • RICS Cost Analysis and Benchmarking (2nd edition, 2024, RICS)
  • RICS Management of Risk (1st edition, 2020, RICS Books)
  • RICS Value Management and Value Engineering (1st edition, 2017, RICS Books)
  • RIBA Plan of Work 2020 (RIBA Publishing)
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