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This book documents the experiences, development, and prospects of
the construction industry in numerous developing countries. It will
provide a strong base of reference for countries looking to improve
their construction industries as part of their wider economic
development programme. The opening chapter presents a strategic
overview of the contents of the book, and each country-specific
chapter is structured to consider the legal and policy frameworks,
administrative infrastructure and procedures, and implementation
mechanisms, as well as the experiences, current activities, and
future plans and programmes with respect to construction industry
development in each country. The concluding chapter looks forward
and considers the implications of future trends for the
construction industries in developing countries and the actions
which will be required to address them. Chapters cover: India,
Singapore, Chile, South Africa, Tanzania, Malaysia, Botswana,
Ghana, Uganda, Indonesia, China, Croatia, and Eswatini. Readers
will learn about the wealth of comparable stories from global
coverage from the detailed country-specific cases. Building on
important scholarly works in the field, this book is essential
reading for academics, researchers, and policy makers in built
environments, economics, construction management, infrastructure
management, and the wider construction industry.
This book documents the experiences, development, and prospects of
the construction industry in numerous developing countries. It will
provide a strong base of reference for countries looking to improve
their construction industries as part of their wider economic
development programme. The opening chapter presents a strategic
overview of the contents of the book, and each country-specific
chapter is structured to consider the legal and policy frameworks,
administrative infrastructure and procedures, and implementation
mechanisms, as well as the experiences, current activities, and
future plans and programmes with respect to construction industry
development in each country. The concluding chapter looks forward
and considers the implications of future trends for the
construction industries in developing countries and the actions
which will be required to address them. Chapters cover: India,
Singapore, Chile, South Africa, Tanzania, Malaysia, Botswana,
Ghana, Uganda, Indonesia, China, Croatia, and Eswatini. Readers
will learn about the wealth of comparable stories from global
coverage from the detailed country-specific cases. Building on
important scholarly works in the field, this book is essential
reading for academics, researchers, and policy makers in built
environments, economics, construction management, infrastructure
management, and the wider construction industry.
This book is designed to be an inclusive for the best practice
approach to building maintenance management, where the processes,
procedures and operational systems meet a high standard of
professional and academic competence. It offers a different
perspective on building maintenance management by presenting the
schematic building maintenance value chain model and it's
implementation in Malaysian university buildings. The findings show
an improvement to building performance, lower maintenance cost,
building sustainability and increased maintenance service user
satisfaction. The learning outcomes and summaries provided for each
chapter and the extensive use of tables and figures add to the
readability of the text. Though the book is based on data from
Malaysia, it is useful for a much wider audience, and the informal
writing style makes it an interesting reference source. This book
is valuable for readers who are practitioners, professionals and
for academic institutions that offer courses in the building field,
including architecture, quantity surveying, civil engineering,
building and facility management, property management, real estate.
It will also be of interest to governments and others involved in
the construction industry.
This book is designed to be an inclusive for the best practice
approach to building maintenance management, where the processes,
procedures and operational systems meet a high standard of
professional and academic competence. It offers a different
perspective on building maintenance management by presenting the
schematic building maintenance value chain model and it's
implementation in Malaysian university buildings. The findings show
an improvement to building performance, lower maintenance cost,
building sustainability and increased maintenance service user
satisfaction. The learning outcomes and summaries provided for each
chapter and the extensive use of tables and figures add to the
readability of the text. Though the book is based on data from
Malaysia, it is useful for a much wider audience, and the informal
writing style makes it an interesting reference source. This book
is valuable for readers who are practitioners, professionals and
for academic institutions that offer courses in the building field,
including architecture, quantity surveying, civil engineering,
building and facility management, property management, real estate.
It will also be of interest to governments and others involved in
the construction industry.
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