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Article

Development of a Taxonomy for Causes of Changes in Construction Projects

1
Faculty of Architecture, Department of Interior Architecture, Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul 34437, Turkey
2
Department of Civil Engineering, Middle East Technical University, Northern Cyprus Campus, Mersin 99738, Turkey
3
Department of Civil Engineering, Yildiz Technical University, Istanbul 34220, Turkey
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Buildings 2024, 14(1), 278; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010278
Submission received: 19 December 2023 / Revised: 7 January 2024 / Accepted: 18 January 2024 / Published: 19 January 2024
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Power of Knowledge in Enhancing Construction Project Delivery)

Abstract

:
Contracting parties in construction projects confront significant challenges due to changes. This is an inherent industry characteristic. Managing changes properly with the help of a taxonomy encompassing many of the causes of changes can have a longitudinal and positive effect on project performance, knowledge management, and stakeholder management. However, studies to date have failed to propose an in-depth taxonomy for change causes in construction projects. Therefore, a taxonomy for change causes that can be applied to different construction projects has been developed. First, a systematic literature review and desk study sessions were conducted to identify the initial list of the taxonomy components. Six case studies were then analyzed to reveal the change causes of these cases. Based on the extracted change causes from the literature review and case studies, a taxonomy was developed by conducting focus group discussions with six experts. In the next step, the applicability and validity of the refined taxonomy were evaluated through face-to-face interviews. As a result, a taxonomy with a three-level hierarchy was proposed. This taxonomy is divided into three levels with 13 main categories, 50 subcategories, and 52 change causes. The proposed taxonomy is expected to contribute to practice by reducing the frequency of changes through proactive management of potential changes and standardizing knowledge management practices for managing change.

1. Introduction

Construction projects are inherently dynamic, involving multiple stakeholders with diverse objectives and subject to frequent changes during their lifecycles. Any modifications to project goals, scope, or requirements—including additions and deletions—are considered changes [1]. These changes can result in significant challenges such as delays, cost overruns, and quality failures. This highlights the importance of effective change management as a critical success factor [2]. Successful change management requires a proactive approach and a knowledge-intensive process that incorporates lessons learned from previous projects in the early stages of a project [3]. Taxonomies play a crucial role in knowledge management systems by facilitating the systematic classification of knowledge. While some efforts have been made to classify change causes in construction projects, a lack of systematic classification, uniform vocabulary, and a comprehensive structure impedes effective change management for industry practitioners [4].
To fill this gap, this study aims to develop a taxonomy classifying change causes in construction projects, following five main steps: (1) A systematic literature review was conducted to extract change causes and main categories. (2) The preliminary taxonomy for change causes was developed according to the literature review and brainstorming sessions. (3) A questionnaire survey was conducted with professionals working in one of six construction projects to determine the change causes in these projects. Hence, a list of change causes was prepared and refined in a way that combines the findings of the literature survey and questionnaire survey. (4) The subcategories were specified, and the change causes were assigned to these subcategories by conducting focus group discussion (FGD) sessions. The most appropriate structure was determined by examining existing taxonomies and a three-level hierarchical taxonomy was proposed accordingly. (5) Finally, a taxonomy for causes of changes that was proposed by integrating all the findings obtained from the literature review, questionnaire survey, and case studies was validated by conducting interviews with the experts. Overall, the practical contributions of the current study can be summarized as follows:
  • Practitioners can use the proposed taxonomy to differentiate change causes, handle the related change causes together, and minimize the changes at the outset of project initiation, enhancing the overall productivity of projects.
  • A taxonomy encompassing all possible change causes can enhance the effectiveness of the decision-making process in case of a change by assisting project parties to identify potential underlying causes of changes.
  • A standardized taxonomy on knowledge about causes of changes can improve knowledge sharing among project parties regarding the causes and effects of changes. Such a knowledge management framework not only reduces the occurrence of changes, but also minimizes the adverse consequences of them.
  • The proposed taxonomy can also enhance the monitoring capability of project teams on changes as well as aiding the reporting of changes and/or causes associated with them in more detail and more reliably; this is expected to construct a trust bridge among parties that can be disrupted due to changes and/or change requests.

2. Critical Review of the Studies on Causes of Changes

The causes of changes in construction projects have widely been investigated in the literature to mitigate the impacts of changes. The primary aim of many existing studies is to identify the most critical causes of changes. For instance, Mohammad et al. [4] identified 17 change causes for building projects and ranked them based on a questionnaire survey. According to the findings of the study, the most critical change causes were identified as plan changes made by the owner, replacement of the materials, and design changes made by the consultants. For a different project setting, Mahamid [5] explored the change order causes of highway projects. The researcher separately ranked 16 causes, extracted from the literature, for contractors and consultants. This revealed that two parties have different opinions on the importance of change causes. By criticizing this approach, Rahman et al. [6] stated that the structural relationships between the causes and effects of changes should be examined to underline the most critical changes, i.e., the underlying causes. They identified 53 causes and 43 effects of changes and examined them using structural equation modeling.
Another commonly focused sub-topic was the investigation of design changes and the identification of the most critical causes of design changes. For instance, Wu et al. [7] considered a highway project for identifying the causes of design changes. They concluded that to prevent design changes in the construction of embankment roads, viaducts, and tunnels, companies should elaborate and manage geological risks. Similarly, Yap and Skitmore [8] identified 39 design change causes based on a literature survey and semi-structured interviews. They asserted the most important causes as being (1) lack of coordination among various professional consultants, (2) change of requirements/specifications, (3) addition/omission of scope, (4) erroneous/discrepancies in design documents, and (5) unforeseen ground conditions. For three different power project types performed in Ghana, Afelete and Jung [9] identified 30 causes of design changes specific to power projects, according to the literature review and expert reviews.
Causes of changes or change orders have also been investigated regarding the economic condition of countries. For instance, Mahamid [5] investigated the major causes of change orders in a developing economy (i.e., Palestine) for highway construction projects and developed a regression model in this regard. The researchers suggested that the proposed model is applicable to developing countries and found that scope change, coordination issues between parties, owner’s financial problems, material changes, and errors in design were the most frequent causes of change orders. Ismail et al. [10] identified critical change causes in roadway projects in Iran, as a representative example of developing economies. Similar to the findings of Mahamid [5], Ismail et al. [10] also found that scope changes, errors in design, financial difficulties, and unforeseen site conditions were the most critical causes that are expected to be common in developing countries. Similar research was conducted in other developing regions such as Saudi Arabia [11], Republic of the Congo [12], UAE [6,13], and Egypt [14]. However, only limited research specifically addressed the causes of changes in developed countries. Among them, Lavikka et al. [15] examined five case projects conducted in the USA, Sweden, and Finland to examine the underlying change causes in hospital construction projects. They found that technological uncertainty, structural complexity (i.e., between medical devices and building components), slow decision-making processes, errors in design, lack of coordination, and uncertain site conditions were among the most commonly addressed change causes. Taylor et al. [16] investigated changes and lessons learned in highway projects in Kentucky state. The researchers examined 610 road projects to underline how the causes of changes differ according to project status or project types. The most common change orders in the state included omissions in contract documents, owner-induced scope changes, and increases in the volume of contract items. Arrain [17] examined the change causes in oil and gas construction projects in Alberta, Canada. They found that scope changes, errors in design, inadequate design, unforeseen conditions, and changes in specifications were the most significant change causes. Overall, according to the literature review, many of the change causes are common in developed and developing regions (e.g., design errors, unforeseen conditions, and scope changes). Still, financial problems seem to be more critical for developing economies than for developed economies. On the other hand, it was observed that many of the studies conducted in developing countries try to solve change issues in a broader context, i.e., with a country-wide perspective, while studies in developed countries usually addressed a solution for a specific state, region, or project.
Many of the studies to date classified the causes of changes while investigating the changes in construction projects. One of the widely used approaches in the classification of causes of changes is origin agents, which are mainly related to the construction stakeholders causing changes. Based on the origin agents, several researchers identified the main categories for causes of changes. For instance, Mohammad et al. [4] proposed that there are four origin agents; namely, client, consultant, contractor, and other. Rahman et al. [6] ignored the other change categories and grouped the causes of changes into the remaining three categories (i.e., client, consultant, contractor) to develop their structural equation model. On the other hand, despite Jarkas and Mubarak [18] using origin agents to group the causes of change orders, they only considered external or exogenous categories instead of stakeholders. Although in most studies the researchers considered the classification categories derived from origin agents, some of the researchers added new categories to represent the change causes more elaborately. For instance, Yap and Skitmore [8] added a site category and used five categories in the investigation of design changes. Likewise, Bitamba and An [12] explored change causes in the Democratic Republic of the Congo that encompassed eight categories. They added five new categories to the traditional classification; namely (1) organizational and management, (2) project, (3) environment, and site conditions, (4) other resources, and (5) economy and governmental regulations, along with design, contractor, and owner. In all these studies, the classifications were formed based on two hierarchical levels. However, an in-depth exploration of the causes of changes with more detailed taxonomies should be performed to fully exploit the benefits of taxonomy.
Some of the researchers added another level to their framework as the first level of the classification addressing the controllability of the causes. Generally, the causes are classified into two groups at this level. These are: internal (controllable), which are generated by the included parties; and external (uncontrollable), which are beyond the control of the parties. For instance, Wu et al. [7] proposed a three-level hierarchical classification for the causes of design changes in highway projects. While the first level covered external and internal factors; at the second level of the classification, they considered (1) origin agents (i.e., owner, contractor, design consultant-related, other) as the internal causes and (2) political and economic factors, natural environmental factors, and third-party factors as the external causes. Afelete and Jung [9] also used a similar hierarchical structure for classifying change causes. They named the first level categories controllable and uncontrollable and followed the origin agent approach (instead using a design-related category instead of a consultant-related category) for identifying the subcategories of controllable factors. However, they did not use any subcategories for uncontrollable factors. Arefazar et al. [19] also used a similar scheme for the classification of change causes to prioritize agile project management strategies as a change management tool. At the first level, they designated each second category internal or external categories. The researchers recommended the following agility-based solutions for effective change management: (1) continuous monitoring of resources, (2) adopting flexible workflow, (3) participation of the client, (4) facilitated communication among project stakeholders, and (5) receiving requirements to respond to the changes. Another change classification was proposed by Chan and Kumaraswamy [20] who, despite adopting the origin of agents for the first-level categories, did not limit themselves to these categories by integrating origin agents (i.e., client, design team, contractor, and external) with the critical resources used in the project as new categories; namely, material, labor, and plant/equipment.
As a generic classification scheme, some researchers attempted to propose taxonomies for classifying change causes. One of the preliminary studies on the taxonomy of change causes was performed by Sun and Meng [21]. The researchers proposed a hierarchical taxonomy including three levels. The first level consisted of three categories; namely, internal, external, and organizational causes. For identifying second-level categories of internal causes, they also used the origin agent approach and proposed the same subcategories used by Wu et al. [7]. However, they adopted a different structure for external causes with five subcategories, i.e., environmental, political, social, economic, and technological factors. Similarly, they incorporated three subcategories into organizational factors, namely, process-related, people-related, and technology-related. The most important difference between the study of Sun and Meng [21] and other studies was that they proposed detailed third-level causes based on a literature survey. Another study aiming to develop a taxonomy for change causes was performed by Padala et al. [3]. At the end of their study, the researchers identified 85 causes of changes and placed them at the third level of the taxonomy by employing a literature review, semi-structured interviews, and focus group discussion. According to their taxonomy, the first level included six categories; namely, client-related, design, interface, construction, external, and performance. It can be inferred that the approaches used in the literature were combined by Padala et al. [3], while some of the categories were eliminated and some new categories were included (such as the stages of construction projects). Despite the above-mentioned studies proposing practical contributions to minimize the causes of changes, there exist some limitations in the existing taxonomies. The following section covers the deficiencies of the existing studies and addresses the need for performing this study.

3. Examining the Current Categories of Change Causes

As seen in the literature, there are many efforts to classify the causes of changes, all posing some pros and cons. The deficiencies of the existing frameworks can be listed as follows.
  • First, many of the existing studies revealed the change causes classification based on case studies. That is to say, existing accounts only reviewed specific project records and documents to identify the change causes. Therefore, the findings of these studies cannot be generalized for all construction projects, rather they can be used only for specific projects and/or in specific locations while being applicable only for the investigated time horizons. Briefly, the majority of recent studies on change causes are project-specific, project type-specific, and/or country-specific.
  • Secondly, in many of the existing research, the methodology used to identify change cause classification is in the form of questionnaire surveys with experts working in the construction industry. However, since these questionnaires were prepared based on previous studies and were finalized without discussion with the experts from a wide range of projects, the questionnaires can provide limited insights into the evolving causes of changes. The researchers chiefly ranked the existing change causes based on the collected questionnaires causing subjective insights, which led to different ranks in the previous studies.
  • Another limitation of the current taxonomies is that the majority of the existing classifications were based upon the origin agent approach, in which the responsible parties were identified instead of proposing a generic model of the taxonomy for change causes. The present approaches can only be beneficial for those conducted with the same project and/or contract type as the case studies used for developing these classification schemes. However, they are not suitable for use as a general model to determine the cause of changes in all types of building projects.
  • Although there exist studies that used change cause classifications, the main purpose of most of them was not to develop a comprehensive taxonomy for the causes of changes. The classifications were primarily used by researchers for various purposes, such as establishing a relationship between change causes and impacts or ranking the causes of changes. Therefore, there is a need for a comprehensive classification of change causes that can be used by all parties to monitor and control the changes in any type of project and any location. Overall, the current research aims to extend the scope of change management for practitioners, who have usually used an incomplete list of “Change Causes”, resulting in unexpected outcomes.

4. Research Methodology

The flow of the research is visualized in Figure 1 and described in the following sections.

4.1. Developing Preliminary Taxonomy (Step 1 and Step 2)

To identify relevant research articles, Scopus was selected for its popularity, scope, performance, and reliability (Graham et al., 2020). The search was performed with the following query string, and 395 documents were retrieved. TITLE-ABS-KEY ((change OR variation OR causes OR orders AND construction)) AND (“causes of change”) OR (“change causes”) OR (“causes for changes”) OR (“change causation”). However, not all of the identified studies were directly related to the subject matter. Hence, by reading the titles, abstracts, and keywords of the captured studies, 157 relevant studies were determined. These studies were further reinvestigated by considering whether they provided any insights about the emergence of changes in construction projects. A total of 82 studies that did not satisfy this criterion were eliminated, which reduced the number of studies to 75. In the next step, the snowballing technique was conducted, and the relevant references in the remaining studies (i.e., 75 studies) were included. As a result, a total of 115 studies were considered suitable to review in this study. Figure 2 shows the distribution of the studies by year. At the end of the initial review, a total of 1578 change causes were extracted. However, in the next step, to simplify the classification process, avoid repetition, and reduce the number of similar causes, some of the identified change causes were combined, leading to 536 distinct change causes.
The distribution of the studies by country is provided in Figure 3. According to this figure, the studies related to change causes were conducted for both developing and developed countries.
In the following step, the first level of the taxonomy was determined by considering the classifications proposed by Mansfield et al. [22], Chan and Kumaraswamy [20], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Sun and Meng [21], Wu et al. [7], Bitamba and An [12], Padala et al. [3], Afelete and Jung [9], and Arefazar et al. [19]. According to the first-level categories proposed in these studies, thirteen main categories were identified. After the identification of the main categories, the change causes identified from the literature were assigned to each category one by one through brainstorming sessions. These brainstorming sessions were conducted by the authors of this study only. In this step, existing classifications in the literature were considered and discussed to develop the preliminary taxonomy. The main categories and the number of causes of changes assigned to each category are given in Figure 4.

4.2. Case Studies (Step 3)

The present study examined six projects in Iran by conducting questionnaire surveys to capture the causes of changes experienced in these projects. A total of 10 participants were invited from different organizations, including five contracting companies, two client organizations, and three consultants in the first stage. After first contact with the representatives of the organizations, six of them (i.e., four from contractors, one from the consultant, and one from the client) agreed to participate in the survey (Table 1). Hence, the heterogeneity in the sample encompassing at least one participant from the major stakeholders was ensured, which helped to capture diverging perspectives in the market. Despite additional projects aiming to increase the number of case projects to 10 by contacting more project representative, none of them replied to the invitations. Besides, all participants are well experienced in the sector, such that two, one, and three of them had 6 to 10 years, 16 to 20 years, and more than 20 years of experience in the construction industry, respectively. Since case studies were examined qualitatively and collected materials from all the projects were engaged in the study, the bias due to the heterogeneity of participants was minimized.
The survey used in this study had two parts. The first part included questions about the respondents’ general situations, such as the type of organization they belong to, their experience in the construction industry, and their current position. In the second part, general information about the projects, namely realized project duration, estimated project duration, realized project cost, estimated project cost, project type, project owner, and reports prepared throughout these projects were required from the participants. Three of these projects were building projects, two of them were infrastructure projects, and the last one was an industrial project. Five projects were public projects and one project was a private project. None of the projects were completed within the budget and scheduled timeline. Based on the provided inputs, the respondents were asked to prepare two lists: (1) the most important five changes that occurred in the corresponding project, and (2) the most important 10 change causes observed in the corresponding project. Based on the provided lists, two new causes of changes, namely “High material cost” and “Wide variety of equipment and machinery costs”, were added to the taxonomy and designated to the financial category. Furthermore, other change causes stated by the experts had already been extracted from the literature, and only minor linguistic changes were performed to explain them more clearly. At the end of this process, the total number of change causes increased to 538.

4.3. Focus Group Discussion (Step 4)

This study performed an FGD session to identify, refine, and finalize the subcategories of the main categories attained. The focus group method was preferred instead of individual interviews since this method enables participants to interact with each other by exchanging their ideas, points of view, and experiences during the discussions to create new, creative, and augmented ideas [24]. Before conducting the FGDs, the size of the focus group should be determined as it plays a critical role in knowledge acquisition. On the one hand, if a high number of experts participate in FGDs, the sessions can be time-consuming and hard to control, but on the other, having few participants may cause low-reliability issues [25]. There are several sample-size suggestions for performing effective discussions. For instance, Krueger and Casey [26] proposed that the ideal size for noncommercial topics is five to eight. Groves et al. [27] suggested that the researchers should use six to twelve participants to reach reliable findings. Based on these suggestions, a minimum of six participants criterion was applied in this study.
The other important issue related to FGDs is the selection of the participants [26]. The participants should have the required knowledge and experience of the selected topic as well as the ability to contribute to the development of the topic. Based on the suggestions of past research, six experts (Table 2) were invited to FGDs and all of them agreed to participate in this study. Two experts are from consultant companies, one expert is from a client organization, and the other experts are from contracting companies. As a result, the sample’s heterogeneity, which can aid in capturing various viewpoints on the subject matter, was attained. Additionally, each member has adequate experience, such that two, one, and three of them had between 10 and 15 years, between 16 and 20 years, and more than 20 years of experience in the industry, respectively.
In the FGDs, the experts examined and categorized the change causes of each main category one by one. Firstly, they started with the first main category and grouped the subcategories by considering their common points in alignment with the context of the main category. The experts discussed the subcategories of the causes of changes in terms of the categories that they should belong to. The majority voting approach was adopted in case of disagreement among focus group participants. The majority voting approach was chosen due to the high number of change causes, which could have made reaching a consensus during discussions a lengthy process. This approach helped prevent participants from leaving focus group discussions prematurely. Despite the allocation of almost all change causes to subcategories with consensus, some disagreements also did arise. In such cases, the authors allowed further discussion until a consensus was reached. If consensus seemed unlikely, the authors would intervene and allocate the cause of changes to the relevant subcategory based on the majority votes. The categorization of the causes of changes was also conducted in a similar vein, i.e., by discussing the context of change causes and subcategories. This process was repeated for each main category to classify subcategories, as well as for each subcategory to classify change causes. Furthermore, with the recommendations of the participants, some change causes were decomposed into elaborated causes. For instance, “change in specifications” was decomposed to form three new causes, namely “specifications changes by the owner”, “specifications changes by the designer” and “specifications changes by the consultant”. Therefore, the total number of change causes increased to 552 (Appendix A).

4.4. Validation of the Taxonomy (Step 5)

The proposed taxonomy was also evaluated by the experts through face-to-face interview sessions. The interviews aimed to estimate the efficiency, assess the applicability, identify the deficiencies, and evaluate the appropriateness of the taxonomy for different parties, project types, and countries. The interviews were conducted with the same experts who participated in the questionnaire survey (i.e., case study). The interviews lasted on average 2 h and 10 min. In the interviews, reports of the projects and developed framework were provided to the experts to help them examine the taxonomy in terms of its validity. The experts prepared two lists to identify the most important changes experienced as well as the main change causes identified in these projects. In addition, the experts evaluated the applicability and efficiency of the taxonomy for three parties, (contractor, owner, consultant), different project types (such as residential building, manufacturing, commercial, highway, etc.), different countries, and three stages of the project; namely, design, planning, and construction. The lists obtained at the end of interviews were compared with the lists prepared initially, i.e., without a developed taxonomy. The second list appeared to be more elaborate, and the same experts identified more change causes for each project. Additionally, there was a clear decrease in the differences between the opinions of the experts, such that the experts proposed nearly the same change causes for the same project settings. The systematic framework provided by the change cause taxonomy can help in reviewing change events and their underlying causes more efficiently and reliably. Therefore, the proposed taxonomy can serve as an elaborate basis for identifying the root causes of changes and reviewing the change management process, leading to more efficient and reliable outcomes.
Finally, the experts stated that the proposed taxonomy is applicable and efficient for all parties, project stages, project types, and in many countries. However, they provided some feedback about the structure of the taxonomy. Four experts suggested that new subcategories should be created for financial factors since they could not find proper categories for a wide variety of labor costs, a wide variety of equipment and machinery costs, high material costs, changes in material costs by a supplier, and a wide variety of overhead costs. Therefore, two subcategories were proposed for the financial factors category, namely, (1) resource costs, and (2) contract and overhead costs. One expert recommended the modification of the “contract management” category to “contractual document and contract management” to clarify the causes related to contractual documents and project scope. Table 3 shows the final version of the subcategories. The final list of the causes of changes and associated subcategories and categories (i.e., the proposed taxonomy) are provided in Appendix A.

5. Discussion of Findings

5.1. Implications of Findings for Project Management

In the proposed taxonomy, the “project management” category is notably associated with many causes of changes (namely 134 change causes) in diverging contexts addressed as subcategories. These subcategories are: (1) construction site management, (2) project quality management, (3) project time management, (4) project communication management, and (5) project organization. Causes of changes can irreversibly affect project objectives, as noted by Chan and Kumaraswamy [20]. They identified poor site management/layout, unsuitable management structure, and improper control over resource allocation as among the significant causes of project delays related to project and site management. Similarly, Kumar [28] highlighted the impact of several change causes identified in this study (e.g., slow site clearance due to restrictions and unavailability of professional construction management) as important contributors to project delays. On the other hand, inspection-induced causes included in this study with the “supervision and quality management” subcategory were also underlined by several researchers. For instance, Alshihri et al. [29] investigated factors affecting cost and time overruns and underlined several associated factors such as delays in inspection/testing, delays in approval, and poor inspection. Alameri et al. [13] explored the causes of changes in mega-construction projects and found “poor inspection and supervision” as the most critical change cause that is associated with contractors.
Another subcategory that received considerable attention from the research society is “scheduling, planning, and control”. This subcategory encompasses similar change causes in terms of their effects such as a change in the project schedule, unrealistic scheduling, underestimation of quantities and complexities, unfeasible design period, overestimation of productivity, etc., all associated with reducing the total duration of the projects without proper analysis of its feasibility. There is a habit of unrealistic project planning in construction projects, and it is hard for project teams to manage difficulties due to improper planning [30]. This not only causes project delays but also incurs significant changes in the execution stage to adjust project processes to the existing and unfeasible plans. Here, “communication and coordination” between project parties plays a critical role in developing appropriate project plans. Still, this subcategory also includes many causes of changes; these are mainly related to lack of collaboration, coordination, communication, and involvement in the design. This leads to conflicts among included parties. This corroborates the ideas presented in the literature. For instance, Yap et al. [31] identified a lack of coordination among consultants as being one of the most critical factors causing design changes. Similarly, in a different project setting, i.e., road construction, Waty, and Sulistio [32] found that coordination among contracting stakeholders is among the top causes of change orders. The lack of communication can arise because of organizational and/or bureaucracy-based issues, which is another subcategory of project management. Most of the identified change causes in this subcategory can be related to slow decision-making, delays in approvals, interim valuations, contractor submissions, responding to consultant inquiries, etc. In a similar vein, Alraie [33] also found delays in responses and/or approvals as being among the most causative factors in terms of change orders.
Participants from six case projects added two new change causes to the taxonomy: (1) wide variety of equipment and machinery cost, and (2) high material costs. As mentioned before, financial and cost-related causes were more critically addressed in studies conducted in developing economies. Cost overrun is one of the most critical problems in the Iranian construction industry and nearly one-fourth of the projects in Iran encountered more than 25% of cost overrun [33]. This may be the reason why participants focused more on missing cost-related causes of changes compared to other categories. Particularly in developing countries, changes induced due to cost-related issues can be more critical as they may threaten the completion of the projects. In addition, poor cost and quantity estimations are one of the critical and consultant-induced change causes, as addressed by Rahmani et al. [6], but participants only from client and contractor organizations who attended to this study underlined cost-related change causes. It can be concluded that consultant-induced change causes have significant impacts on the performance of clients and contractors. Therefore, working with a competent consultant is a must for minimizing changes and related issues in construction projects.

5.2. Benefits and Challenges of Utilizing the Proposed Taxonomy

This study proposes the most comprehensive taxonomy of change causes for construction projects. Despite different taxonomies having been proposed in the literature, none of the existing taxonomies is as comprehensive as the one presented in this study. The first and most crucial step in effective construction change management is identifying all possible change causes since the accuracy and efficiency of subsequent decisions depend heavily on the precision and reliability of this initial step. However, in most of the projects, some of the change causes are identified after the change event as a reactive approach. However, companies must overcome the consequences of these changes by identifying the potential change causes before the occurrence of changes as a proactive approach. Hence, with the help of the taxonomy, the companies can oversee these unidentified, unforeseen, and unstructured change causes. In this way, they can develop strategies to manage the causes of changes proactively leading to the elimination of changes, which is a better strategy than adjusting them to the current conditions for effective change management. In addition, the proposed taxonomy can be used to record the changes more systematically, and these records can be used subsequently due to the existence of the same understanding [3]. This study identified 552 change causes in the third level, which can provide a framework for the managers to identify the root causes of the changes, either to eliminate them or to decrease the possibility of their reoccurrence. In other words, construction firms should identify the change causes accurately, systematically, and completely; otherwise, they may use their limited resources ineffectively. The validation process shows that the presented taxonomy can be used to identify the unseen change causes in any project type, in any country, and by any project stakeholders. These mirror the views of Sun and Meng [21], who mentioned the criticality of systematic review in the early change cause identification process. Overall, the proposed change causes taxonomy can be beneficial for the construction companies to complete the projects successfully, to monitor changes more systematically, and to enhance knowledge sharing and completeness comprehensively.
Sun and Meng [21] asserted that many other change causes are not stated in their taxonomy, and it is nearly impossible to produce a list that shows all change causes. Similarly, the proposed taxonomy in this study also does not show all change causes. Still, since it is much more comprehensive than other studies, the companies will be able to use this taxonomy without making many modifications. Besides, the limitations of the previous taxonomies may lead to impractical applications due to the lack of a detailed description of changes. Finally, the hierarchical structure used in this study can be modified for the newly emerged change causes.
It is essential to note that due to the size of the proposed taxonomy, the users can struggle to identify the change causes. Although reducing the number of categories, subcategories, and change causes was an alternative to the proposed comprehensive taxonomy, the experts who participated in the validation step gave positive feedback about the applicability of the taxonomy. They stated that due to the hierarchical structure of the taxonomy, companies can review the change causes more easily. In addition, they further stated that the number of main categories is appropriate, and they seem to be identified following the same conceptual approach of the project management teams. Finally, the respondents also addressed that the taxonomy can also be beneficial for resolving emerging claims and disputes (since changes are the main causes of claims and disputes [34]) to reveal the root causes of changes and parties responsible for the changes.

5.3. Suggestions for Effective Change Management

This study found that frequent changes during construction projects are often caused by improper feasibility assessment, design, and planning. To avoid changes, companies should allocate sufficient time [35,36] and resources, including hiring experienced consultants and planners [37], aiding to develop more realistic and applicable plans. Additionally, these plans should be highly elaborated, which can lead to uncertainties in the plans. To achieve this, a standard manual with a checklist can be used [37].
Another critical issue is identified as appropriate communication and coordination between the parties. However, due to high fragmentation among the parties, communication and coordination are problematic in construction projects [8]. Knowledge management tools can facilitate capturing and sharing knowledge, especially tacit knowledge, which is critical for change management compared to explicit knowledge [2]. These tools can also improve trust between parties and change attitudes. Additionally, these tools play a critical role in changing the attitudes of the parties since trust between parties can improve with the usage of these tools. Additionally, companies can use these tools to capture lessons learned from previous changes, helping maintain continuous improvement goals. Hence, the proposed taxonomy can be used in the development of these knowledge management tools.
The other useful tool that companies can use to manage the changes effectively is building information modelling (BIM). By using BIM appropriately, companies can identify the most likely changes in time and avoid clashes [38]. BIM can be used to identify possible changes in advance, avoid clashes, identify change history, analyze deficiencies, and take-off quantities. BIM-based tools have been developed for change management, such as a BIM-based change management process proposed by Mejlænder-Larsen [38] to handle design changes resulting from owner and contractor demands. Some authors have even developed BIM-based tools which can be used for change management. Mejlænder-Larsen [38] proposed a BIM-based change management process to handle the design changes resulting from owner and contractor demands. In their system, a web-based system manages design changes. In another study, Likhitruangsilp et al. [39] presented a decision support system based on BIM that enables project stakeholders to anticipate the effects of change orders on different project success criteria, such as schedule, budget, and physical conditions.

6. Conclusions

The objective of this study is to create a reliable and all-encompassing classification for change causes. The proposed classification is structured hierarchically and has three levels, with the lowest being the change causes. To identify the causes of changes, a thorough literature review was conducted, and the preliminary list was further refined by adding the change causes observed in six construction projects that performed poorly regarding cost and time criteria. The findings from the literature review and the actual projects combined led to the identification of 552 change causes. The study reveals that 13 types of changes can be observed in any construction project.
Among the main categories of the taxonomy, the project management category involves the highest number of change causes. This shows that if project management is not performed carefully, the possibility of confronting a diversity of changes in the project is high. Therefore, construction companies should allocate appropriate resources and skills for project management. In other words, this category requires critical attention since the parties can minimize the occurrence of changes related to project management with a systematic and elaborative governance approach. In particular, poor communication and coordination between parties may cause many types of changes. In addition, some change causes such as changes due to external factors are not under the control of the construction companies, and as such cannot be avoided by the efforts of the construction companies. Therefore, by improving communication and collaboration with other parties such as governmental agencies, non-profit organizations, and trade unions, which can manage and/or control such externally driven changes, construction companies can mitigate their adverse impacts.
This study is not free of limitations. First, the current study used several qualitative techniques to identify and elaborate on the causes of changes. Therefore, a quantitative assessment of the change causes per category/subcategory can further illustrate the most critical ones since resource limitation is the case for real-life conditions and many companies cannot afford the required measures for all the change causes. Second, despite the case studies covering a wide range of projects and stakeholders, experts from some project types (such as energy) and stakeholder groups (such as suppliers and subcontractors) did not participate in the present research, restricting the penetration of certain change causes associated with these project types and stakeholders into the taxonomy. Therefore, covering all project types and stakeholders, and even comparing the change causes observed in diverging project types and perception differences would be an intriguing research direction. Besides, this study used six case projects conducted in Iran to extract the change causes with a limited heterogeneity of the projects (i.e., only one client, consultant, and private entities were involved). The main reason for this limitation was that many of the other contacted project representatives decided not to participate in the study. Hence, increasing the number of participants from the client, consultant, and private sides can further increase the generalizability of the research findings. Enhancing the quality of this study can be achieved by developing a new taxonomy that specifically delineates the impact of changes on project outcomes. Additionally, the taxonomy can be further refined by incorporating an additional layer that clarifies the responsible party of the change causes. This can enable construction companies to more effectively assign management of a change cause to the relevant party if it arises. Overall, the output of this study can be used by construction companies to capture the knowledge about change causes more systematically, thus increasing its volume, variety, veracity, and useability, only with which effective change management can be realized. Construction companies can further utilize the proposed taxonomy to develop procedures to eliminate causes of changes due to errors, as well as improve their change management strategies. The taxonomy might also be used to develop robust knowledge management software for change management.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, Z.B. and C.B.; methodology, Z.B. and C.B.; validation, Z.B., C.B. and K.K.; formal analysis, C.B.; investigation, Z.B.; writing—original draft preparation, C.B. and K.K.; writing—review and editing, C.B. and K.K.; visualization, K.K.; supervision, Z.B.; project administration, Z.B. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Data Availability Statement

The corresponding author can provide the data from this study upon request. The data are not publicly available due to the disallowance of the participants.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. The full view of the proposed taxonomy.
Table A1. The full view of the proposed taxonomy.
Level 1: Human resources
Level 2: Organizing and Managing
1Inequitable labor distributionRahman et al. [6]
2Replacement of key personnel Zadeh et al. [40]
3Turnover of contractor’s employeeSun and Meng [21], Safapour et al. [41], and Yap et al. [42]
4Overstaffing or understaffingOkada et al. [43]
5Extensive overtime for laborHanna et al. [44], Safapour et al. [41], Arditi et al. [45]
6Additional shiftsWaney et al. [46]
7Replacement of key personnel by ownerRahman et al. [6], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
8Excessive turnover of owner’s technical personnelSun and Meng [21], Safapour et al. [41], Yap et al. [42]
9Absenteeism of laborSafapour et al. [41], Hanna et al. [44], Ajayi and Chinda [48], Arditi et al. [45]
10Absenteeism of consultant’s supervisorsAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Alaghbari et al. [49]
11Low motivation and morale of laborsYap and Tan [50], Shoar et al. [51], Kumar [28], Niazi and Painting [52]
12Nationality of laborsAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Niazi and Painting [52]
13Conflict among workers due to different personalitySafapour et al. [41]
Level 2: Availability
1Unavailability/shortage of laborAltaf et al. [53], Staiti et al. [54], Kumar [28], Yates [55], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
2Shortage of contractor’s technical professionals Rahman et al. [6], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
3Shortage of qualified/skilled labor/craftAltaf et al. [53], Enshassi et al. [35], Rashid et al. [57], Project 5
4Shortage of qualified local laborHilali et al. [58], Toor and Ogunlana [59], Arditi et al. [45]
5Shortage of qualified owner’s engineers Alnuaimi et al. [37]
6Shortage of management support and staff training to simulate the construction processKumar [28], Lee et al. [60]
7Shortage of qualified managersYap et al. [42]
8Shortage of qualified owner’s representativeJarkas and Mubarak [18], Toor and Ogunlana [59], Arditi et al. [45]
9Shortage of contractor’s administrative personnelRahman et al. [6], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Sweis et al. [61]
10Shortage of contractor’s site staffAlaghbari et al. [49]
Level 2: Capabilities
1Unqualified/Inexperienced laborMaqbool and Rashid [62], Staiti et al. [54], Chan and Kumaraswamy [20], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
2Unskillful laborSafapour et al. [41], Yap et al. [42], Lee et al. [60], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
3Skill shortage in certain tradesSun and Meng [21], Rahman et al. [6], Yap et al. [42]
4Low level of labors efficiency/ProductivityRahman et al. [6], Kumar [28], Yates [55], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Prasad et al. [63]
5Inadequate skill of equipment-operatorRahman et al. [6], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
6Inexperienced consultant’s site staffAlshihri et al. [29], Alaghbari et al. [49]
7Incompetent technical staff Maqbool and Rashid [62]
Level 1: Material
Level 2: Procurement Process of Materials
1Delay in material deliveryStaiti et al. [54], Kumar [28], Alshihri et al. [29], Rashid et al. [57], Yates [55]
2Poor programming of material procurementRahman et al. [6], Chan and Kumaraswamy [20]
3Poorly scheduled supply of material to the siteArefazar et al. [19]
4Delay in manufacturing special building materialsKumar [28], Alshihri et al. [29]
5Problems arising from imported materials and plant itemsHilali et al. [58], Hansen et al. [36], Prasad et al. [63]
6Late procurement of materialsJarkas and Mubarak [18], Alshihri et al. [29], Keane et al. [64]
7Inappropriate/Poor procurement methodMaluleke et al. [65], Dosumu and Aigbavboa [66], Enshassi et al. [35]
8Fluctuation of material pricesBitamba and An [12]
9Substituting material priceBitamba and An [12]
10Poor handling of material on-siteYap and Tan [50]
11Delays/Problems in delivery of materials or goods due to faults of the ownerWu et al. [7]
Level 2: Availability and Variety of Materials
1Unavailability of necessary materials on-site Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Alaghbari et al. [49], Project 3
2Delay in the selection of materials due to the existence of many choicesKumar [28], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
3Shortage of construction materials in the marketKumar [28], Enshassi et al. [35], Alshihri et al. [29], Alaghbari et al. [49], Prasad et al. [63]
Level 2: Storage of Materials in the Construction Site
1Problems in material storageLee et al. [60], Alshihri et al. [29]
2Damage to materials during storageKumar [28], Alshihri et al. [29], Yates [55]
3Unforeseen material damagesLee et al. [60], Lerche et al. [67]
4Lack of information about available materialsEnshassi et al. [35], Perera et al. [68], Keane et al. [64], Badawy [14]
Level 2: Quality of Procured Materials
1Materials in incompliant with specificationsBitamba and An [12], Lee et al. [60], Mahamid [5]
2Rejected materialRahman et al. [6]
3Poor quality of materialsLerche et al. [67], Rahman et al. [6], Ajayi and Chinda [48], Yates [55]
4Changes in material specifications during constructionRahman et al. [6], Yap et al. [31]
5Problems with new materialsRahman et al. [6], Padala et al. [3], Sun and Meng [21], Project 2, Project 4
6Changes in material types during constructionRahman et al. [6], Ajayi and Chinda [48], Kumar [28]
7Replacement/Substitution of materialsRahman et al. [6], Mohammad et al. [4], Keane et al. [64]
8Material changes due to shortage of particular material in the marketChoudhry et al. [69]
Level 1: Other resources
Level 2: Procurement and Delivery of Equipment and Machines
1Equipment delivery problemAjayi and Chinda [48], Yates [55]
2Improper handling of machinery and equipmentYap and Tan [50], Yap et al. [42]
3Wrong selectionChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Padala et al. [3]
4Delay in manufacturing special building equipmentAlshihri et al. [29], Rashid et al. [57]
5Procurement of poor qualified equipment Yates [55]
Level 2: Availability of Equipment and Machines in the Market
1Lack of appropriate equipment/toolsBitamba and An [12], Yates [55]
2Lack of equipment/toolsMohammad et al. [4], Bitamba and An [12], Gunduz et al. [70]
3Lack of specified productsRashid et al. [57]
4Lack of new and high-technology mechanical equipmentAltaf et al. [53], Almasi et al. [71]
5Lack of knowledge about available equipmentPerera et al. [68], Badawy [14], Enshassi et al. [35]
6Lack of spare partsEnshassi et al. [35]
Level 2: Repair and Maintenance Capabilities
1Lack of repair facilities for equipment and toolsAjayi and Chinda [48], Chan and Kumaraswamy [20], Yates [55]
2Lack of maintenance facilities for equipment and toolsYap et al. [42]
Level 2: Productivity of Machines and Equipment
1Insufficient productivity of equipmentMahamid [5], Chan and Kumaraswamy [20], Gunduz et al. [70]
2Poor qualified equipment used for the worksWaty and Sulistio [32], Alshihri et al. [29], Gunduz et al. [70]
3Inadequate modern equipmentGunduz et al. [70]
Level 2: Quality of Machines and Equipment
1Poor standard of machinery and equipmentYap et al. [42], Yates [55]
2Improper/Wrong tools for materialsYates [55]
3Frequent equipment breakdownsGunduz et al. [70]
Level 1: Financial Factors
Level 2: Cashflows
1Delays in contractor’s progress paymentsAlshihri et al. [29], Yap and Tan [50], Maqbool and Rashid [62], Ajayi and Chinda [48], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56], Project 4, Project 5, Project 6
2Additional payments to the contractorFamadico and Baccay [72], Perera et al. [68]
3Late payment to the subcontractor by the main contractorAlmasi et al. [71], Prasad et al. [63]
4Delay of retention paymentGunduz and Mohammad [73], Ajayi and Chinda [48]
Level 2: Financing Conditions
1Poor project financing Chan and Kumaraswamy [20]
2Failure to finance the project on time/financing difficultiesFaten Albtoush et al. [74]
3Funding changesFaten Albtoush et al. [74]
4Lack of owner’s financeAfelete and Jung [9]
5Financial constraints faced by the ownerYap et al. [31], Aljassmi et al. [75]
6Contractor’s financial difficultiesAlshihri et al. [29], Mohammad et al. [4], Hanif et al. [76], Enshassi et al. [35], Rashid et al. [57], Keane et al. [64]
7Owner’s financial difficultiesFaten Albtoush et al. [74], Ismail et al. [10], Mahamid [5], Rashid et al. [57], Keane et al. [64], Project 1, Project 2, Project 4, Project 5, Project 6
8Problems in cash flow managementRahman et al. [6], Maqbool and Rashid [62], Alshihri et al. [29]
9Contractor’s financial obligationsBalbaa et al. [77], Faten Albtoush et al. [74]
10Bankruptcy by contractor/subcontractor or supplierYang and Chen [78], Sun and Meng [21], Afelete and Jung [9], Yates [55]
11Subcontractor’s financial difficultiesRahman et al. [6], Project 6
12Owner’s/contractor’s cash flow problemRahman et al. [6], Aljohani et al. [79]
Level 2: Resource Costs
1Change in material costs applied by a supplierPeansupap and Cheang [80], Aljohani et al. [79]
2A wide variety of labor costsRahman et al. [6], Aljohani et al. [79], Project 5
3Wide variety of equipment and machinery costs (e.g., first cost, rent)Project 1, Project 4
4High material costsProject 3, Project 4
Level 2: Contract and Overhead Costs
1Wide variety of overhead costsMaqbool and Rashid [62], Rahman et al. [6], Project 2
Level 1: External factors
Level 2: Weather
1Extreme hot weather Ezenta [81]
2Weather changesBakr [82], Mohammad et al. [4]
3Humidity effect on construction activitiesJarkas and Mubarak [18], Ballesteros-Pérez et al. [83], Yates [55]
4Inclement weather effect on construction activitiesHao et al. [84], Jarkas and Mubarak [18]
5Wind effect on construction activitiesLerche et al. [67], Dosumu and Aigbavboa [66]
6Rain/snow effect on construction activitiesWu et al. [7], Dosumu and Aigbavboa [66], Yates [55], Project 2
7Extreme cold weather effect on construction activitiesEzenta [81], Yates [55]
8BlizzardsWu et al. [7], Sun and Meng [21]
9StormsBallesteros-Pérez et al. [83]
10Hurricanes/Cyclones/TornadoesOkada et al. [43]
Level 2: Catastrophes
1Artificial/Manmade disastersWu et al. [7]
2EarthquakesSun and Meng [21], Okada et al. [43], Almasi et al. [71], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
3LandslidesWaty and Sulistio [32], Hsieh et al. [85]
4Volcanic eruptionsWu et al. [7], Sun and Meng [21]
5FloodsHsieh et al. [85], Waty and Sulistio [32], Sun and Meng [21]
6Limnic eruptionsSun and Meng [21], Wu et al. [7]
7TsunamisSun and Meng [21], Wu et al. [7]
8DroughtsSun and Meng [21], Wu et al. [7]
9WildfiresSun and Meng [21], Wu et al. [7]
10AvalanchesSun and Meng [21], Wu et al. [7]
11Soil settlementHsieh et al. [85], Waty and Sulistio [32]
Level 2: Environmental Problems
1Environmental protection and mitigation costsSun and Meng [21], Waty and Sulistio [32]
2Problems due to site pollution and noisePadala et al. [3], Arditi et al. [45]
3Environmental concerns and restrictionsChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Yates [55]
4Conservation restrictionsSun and Meng [21], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
Level 2: Security Problems
1Poor site securityHsieh et al. [85]
2Theft/Vandalism inside the siteWaty and Sulistio [32]
Level 1: Health and Safety Concerns
Level 2: Safety Concerns
1Poor safety conditionsSun and Meng [21], Arditi et al. [45]
2Accidents during constructionKumar [28], Abd El-Razek et al. [86], Mpofu et al. [87]
3Unsafe practices during constructionRahman et al. [6]
4Damage to structureAbd El-Razek et al. [86]
5Lateness in safety facilities reinforcementHsieh et al. [85]
6Failure to meet safety rules and regulationsBalbaa et al. [77], Sweis et al. [61]
7Lack of safety rules and regulationsBalbaa et al. [77]
8Residential safetyWu et al. [7]
9Work incidentsWu et al. [7], Chang [88]
Level 2: Health Concerns
1EpidemicsAlshihri et al. [29], Trauner et al. [89]
2PandemicsAlshihri et al. [29], Nguyen and Do [90]
3EndemicsYap and Tan [50]
4High noise levelPadala et al. [3]
5Labor injuriesSafapour et al. [41]
Level 1: Project Location
Level 2: Ground Conditions
1Unexpected foundation conditions Wu et al. [7]
2Incomplete geological survey/informationWu et al. [7]
3Groundwater locationWu et al. [7]
4Unexpected underground conditions (geological issues/groundwater level issues, etc.)Wu et al. [7], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
5Changes in geological conditionsWu et al. [7], Abad et al. [91]
6Uncertainty in locating pipe positions undergroundWu et al. [7]
7Archaeology findings (unexpected archaeological finds)Lee et al. [60], Lee [92]
8Conflict with existing underground utilitiesShrestha et al. [93], Prasad et al. [63]
9Unanticipated underground utilitiesOkada et al. [43], Yap et al. [31]
10Insufficient soil investigationYap et al. [31]
11Unforeseen ground conditions (rock, acid, sediment basin)Yap et al. [31], Sun and Meng [21], Annamalaisami and Kuppuswamy [94]
12Unexpected ground elevation and landformWu et al. [7]
13Changes in site locationPadala et al. [3]
Level 2: Site Condition and Restrictions
1Poor investigation of project locationRahman et al. [6], Altaf et al. [53], Abad et al. [91], Project 5
2Changes in site conditions due to the contractor Wu et al. [7]
3Differing site conditionsEnshassi et al. [35], Hilali et al. [58], Rashid et al. [57]
4Discrepancies between the survey and existing on-site conditionsWu et al. [7]
5Unforeseen site conditionsAfelete and Jung [9], Motawa et al. [95], Arditi et al. [45]
6Poor traffic control regulation and inadequate restriction Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
7Poor site storage capacityLee et al. [60], Arditi et al. [45]
8Overcrowded work area/CongestionPadala et al. [3], Sun and Meng [21]
9Poor site layoutPadala et al. [3], Arditi et al. [45]
10Problems due to site restrictionsRahman et al. [6], Wu et al. [7]
11Inconsistency between drawings and site conditionsHsieh et al. [85], Abad et al. [91]
Level 2: Accessibility and Possession
1Late delivery of the construction site to the contractorWu et al. [7], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56], Project 5
2Difficulty in site acquisitionSun and Meng [21]
3Expropriation costs (underestimated expropriation costs)Wu et al. [7], Lee [92]
4Restricted access to the siteRashid et al. [57]
5Negligence of Employer regarding egress and entranceSun and Meng [21]
6Failure of the employer to provide right of wayWu et al. [7]
Level 1: Project Stakeholders
Level 2: Project Stakeholders’ Competence and Experience
1Lack of owner’s technical knowledgeAfelete and Jung [9], Alaghbari et al. [49]
2Lack of experience of the owner in construction projectsAfelete and Jung [9], Heravi and Charkhakan [96], Ameyaw et al. [97]
3Lack of technical knowledge of the consultantAfelete and Jung [9], Keane et al. [64]
4Consultant’s inabilityYap et al. [98], Chang [88]
5Inexperienced consultantRahman et al. [6], Yap et al. [31], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
6Inadequate contractor experienceChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Yap et al. [99]
7Lack of experience with the type of projectYap et al. [99], Annamalaisami and Kuppuswamy [94]
8Lack of experience in the project locationAnnamalaisami and Kuppuswamy [94]
9Unfamiliarity of contractor with local regulationsRahman et al. [6], Yap et al. [99], Annamalaisami and Kuppuswamy [94]
10Incompetent project teamRahman et al. [6]
11Lack of experience in the contractAnnamalaisami and Kuppuswamy [94]
12Inadequate design-team experienceHeravi and Charkhakan [96], Chan and Kumaraswamy [20], Lopez et al. [100]
13Lack of training programs offered to the design teamAssaf and Al-Hejji [23]
14Inexperienced subcontractorsRahman et al. [6], Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Project 3, Project 6
15Unfamiliarity with local conditionsBadawy [14], Keane et al. [64]
16Insufficient training of designersYang and Wei [101]
Level 2: Project Stakeholders’ Expectations
1Unrealistic time/cost/quality targets of ownerDo et al. [102], Jarkas and Mubarak [18]
2Unrealistic owner expectationsShoar et al. [51]
3Contractor’s desire to improve his financial situationMohammad et al. [4], Pourrostam et al. [103]
4Unrealistic information expectations by the contractorDo et al. [102]
5Special owner requirementsWu et al. [104]
6Unclear owner’s needs during the design stageAlnuaimi et al. [37], Project 1
7Owner’s unclear requirementsMpofu et al. [87], Arditi et al. [45]
8Growing needs of partiesChang et al. [105], Chang [88]
9Major changes in requirementsYap et al. [31]
10Changes in owner’s requirementsEnshassi et al. [35], Yang and Wei [101]
11The design engineer’s misunderstanding of the owner’s requirementsKumar [28], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Arefazar et al. [19]
Level 2: Culture and Ethics
1Owner or contractor’s disregard for the terms of the contractAbd El-Razek et al. [86], Aljohani et al. [79], Prasad et al. [63]
2Misuses of variations instructions by the contractorAlnuaimi et al. [37]
3Personality clashes between the partiesDo et al. [102], Lavikka et al. [15]
4Uncooperative ownerMpofu et al. [87]
5Fraudulent behavior of the contractor and consultantAlshihri et al. [29], Shoar et al. [51], Arditi et al. [45]
6Existence of opportunistic behavior among project partiesCharkhakan and Heravi [106], Shoar et al. [51]
7Inflexibility (rigidity) of consultant/clientAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Alshihri et al. [29]
8Issues regarding personality typeSafapour et al. [41]
9Obstinate nature of employerBadawy [14], Arefazar et al. [19], Keane et al. [64]
Level 1: Project Management
Level 2: Construction Site Management
1Inadequate of contractor’s site management capabilityChan and Kumaraswamy [20]
2Poor project management by contractorVarghese et al. [107], Bitamba and An [12], Alnuaimi et al. [37]
3Inadequate/poor project management assistance by consultantJarkas and Mubarak [18]
4Untrained and inexperienced project management teamSafapour and Kermanshachi [108], Olawale and Sun [109]
5The project manager’s inappropriate leadership styleChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Almasi et al. [71], Arditi et al. [45]
6Contractor’s inappropriate management styleChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Maqbool and Rashid [62]
7Unavailability of professional construction managementKumar [28], Ramanathan et al. [110]
8Poor site/project management skillsSun and Meng [21]
9Slow site clearance due to restrictionsKumar [28], Ramanathan et al. [110]
10Contractor’s poor site managementAlshihri et al. [29], Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
11Failure of the contractor/project manager to use the tools to manage the project symmetrically Toor and Ogunlana [59], Arditi et al. [45]
12Inaccurate site investigation by consultantIlter and Celik [111], Annamalaisami and Kuppuswamy [94]
13Poor quality of site documentationLavikka et al. [15]
14Improper control over site resource allocationChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Maqbool and Rashid [62], Faridi and El-Sayegh [112]
15Lack of project management groupFaridi and El-Sayegh [112]
16The contractor and his staff focus on other projectsChoudhry et al. [69]
17Failure to provide adequate protection for materials and completed worksYap et al. [42]
18Labors re-allocation to other projectsMahamid [5]
Level 2: Project Quality Management
1Delays in consultant’s site inspectionAlshihri et al. [29], Mpofu et al. [87], Prasad et al. [63]
2Long waiting time for sample materials approvalAlshihri et al. [29], Mpofu et al. [87], Faridi and El-Sayegh [112]
3Weak quality control and supervision consulting companyCharkhakan and Heravi [106]
4Poor inspection and supervision by the contractorAlshihri et al. [29], Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
5Long waiting time for approval of quality control tests or results due to the consultantFaridi and El-Sayegh [112]
6The consultant’s poor inspection and testing procedureRahman et al. [6], Faridi and El-Sayegh [112]
7Consultant’s slow response to quality proceduresRahman et al. [6], Sweis et al. [61]
8Inefficient quality assurance and quality controlLopez et al. [100], Safapour et al. [41], Alshihri et al. [29], Yates [55]
9Lack of quality assurance of materialsVarghese et al. [107]
10Long waiting time for confirmation of test samples and delivered materials due to consultantChan and Kumaraswamy [20]
11Delay in performing the final audit and issuing certification by a third partyAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Kumar [28], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56], Bramble and Callahan [113]
12Poor consultant’s supervisionAlnuaimi et al. [37], Jadhav and Bhirud [114]
13Inadequate value engineeringKeane et al. [64], Yap et al. [31], Shoar et al. [51], Balbaa et al. [77]
Level 2: Project Time Management
1Changes in project scheduleMohammad et al. [4], Hanif et al. [76]
2Inexperienced contractor in planning and controlling the project scheduleChan and Kumaraswamy [20]
3Underestimation of the complexity of the projectBajjou and Chafi [115]
4Non-availability of overall project planningAlnuaimi et al. [37], Waty and Sulistio [32]
5Overestimation of the labor productivityChanmeka et al. [116], Faridi and El-Sayegh [112]
6Underestimation of quantitiesAmeyaw et al. [97], Yates [55]
7Failure to plan and schedule projects effectively by the contractorAlshihri et al. [29], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
8Nonavailability of records of similar projectsKumar [28], Alnuaimi et al. [37]
9Inexperienced experts in estimating time and resourcesRamanathan et al. [110]
10Unrealistic design periodsAlnuaimi et al. [37], Jadhav and Bhirud [114]
11Unrealistic or insufficient construction scheduleAlnuaimi et al. [37], Padala et al. [3], Yates [55]
12Contractors’ planning and scheduling problemsBajjou and Chafi [115]
13Inaccurate evaluation of project time/durationFrimpong et al. [117], Olawale and Sun [109], Yang and Wei [101]
14Inaccurate estimate quantityYang and Chen [78], Prasad et al. [63]
15Inadequate early planning of the projectKumar [28], Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Ramanathan et al. [110], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Prasad et al. [63]
16Unreasonable/unpractical initial scheduleArefazar et al. [19]
17Failure to effectively control project progress by the ownerAlshihri et al. [29]
18Contractor’s poor project planning and scheduling process Gunduz and Khan [118], Mpofu et al. [87], Prasad et al. [63]
19Inefficient/poor work breakdown structureAl-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
20Long waiting for information from other partiesRamanathan et al. [110], Frimpong et al. [117]
21Lack of contractor’s knowledge about planning and scheduling Chan and Kumaraswamy [20], Maqbool and Rashid [62]
22Conflicts between subcontractors’ and contractor’s schedulesAssaf and Al-Hejji [23]
23Failure to effectively control project progress by the contractor/Inadequate progress reviewAl-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Alshihri et al. [29], Faridi and El-Sayegh [112]
24Inadequate foresight about the nature of the project at the design stageAlnuaimi et al. [37]
25Unrealistic project schedule/design periodArditi et al. [45]
26Inappropriate software usage for time managementOlawale and Sun [109]
27Lack of data related to activity duration and resourcesYang and Wei [101], Faridi and El-Sayegh [112], Abd El-Razek et al. [86]
28Unreasonable/unpractical initial planYang and Wei [101]
Level 2: Project Communication management
1Poor communication and coordination between designersYap et al. [42], Assaf et al. [119], Yap et al. [31], Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Yang and Wei [101]
2Lack of coordination between international and local designersEnshassi et al. [35]
3Lack of coordination between contractor and consultantMohammad et al. [4]
4Poor communication among the various partiesDo et al. [102], Nguyen and Do [90]
5Lack of coordination and communication with related organizations outside of the project by the clientCharkhakan and Heravi [106]
6Insufficient communication between the owner and designerKeane et al. [64]
7Poor communication between the designer and other construction partiesHwang et al. [120]
8Lack of design team involvement in the construction stageBadawy [14], Arditi et al. [45]
9Lack of contractor’s involvement in designKeane et al. [64]
10Conflicts between contractors and designersGrau et al. [121]
11Conflicts amongst consultants with other partiesNiazi and Painting [52]
12Poor communication and coordination between consultantsYap et al. [31], Padala et al. [3]
13Poor communication and coordination among variousprofessional disciplinesYap et al. [122]
14Incapability of the owner in coordinating multiple contractorsYates [55], Bramble and Callahan [113]
15Inadequate pre-design communicationWu et al. [7]
16Conflicts between co-ownership of the projectSafapour and Kermanshachi [108]
17Conflicts between the owner and other partiesPeansupap and Cheang [80], Olawale and Sun [109]
18Poor communication and coordination between the owner and the consultantYap et al. [31]
19Poor communication and coordination between the owner and end usersYap et al. [31]
20Poor communication and coordination among the project partiesEnshassi et al. [35], Balbaa et al. [77], Faridi and El-Sayegh [112], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
21Poor communication and coordination between relevant governmental units and the ownerAlnuaimi et al. [37], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
22Conflict of perspective between contractor and consultantAbd El-Razek et al. [86], Alshihri et al. [29]
23Poor communication and coordination between the contractor and other partiesAssaf and Al-Hejji [23]
24Poor communication and coordination between the owner and other partiesAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Rachid [123]
25Problems in trade coordinationYates [55]
26Owner’s incomplete/incorrect informationChang [88]
27Failure of the owner to provide informationChang [88]
28Inadequate information and supervision by the ownerYates [55], Mahamid [5]
29Insufficient or poorly integrated baseline project data provided by the ownerYang and Wei [101]
30Poor collaboration among project team membersRamanathan et al. [110]
31Insufficient or poorly integrated baseline project data provided by the contractorYang and Wei [101]
32Ineffective involvement of the contractor’s head office Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
33Personal conflicts among laborsAssaf and Al-Hejji [23]
34Labor and management relationsAbd El-Razek et al. [86]
35Unnecessary interference by the ownerMarzouk and El-Rasas [56], Niazi and Painting [52], Bramble and Callahan [113]
36Slow information delivery between designersYang and Wei [101]
37Poor information dissemination/provision by consultantAibinu and Odeyinka [124]
38Subcontractor interferenceYates [55]
39Insufficient coordination between various departments in utility shifting and placingVarghese et al. [107]
40Poor communication between site management and the labor forceJarkas and Mubarak [18]
Level 2: Project Organization
1Delay in issuing the owner’s change orders Niazi and Painting [52], Project 6
2Changes in decision-making authorityChang [88], Project 3
3Slow decision-making by designersYang and Wei [101]
4Delay in revisions made by consultant while construction is in progressAbd El-Razek et al. [86], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
5Delay in the consultant’s interim valuationAibinu and Odeyinka [124]
6Owner’s protracted refusal to settle contractor claimsAl-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Sweis et al. [61]
7Delay in consultant’s valuation of variation worksAibinu and Odeyinka [124]
8Delayed and slow supervision in making decisionsAlaghbari et al. [49], Frimpong et al. [117]
9Delay in the consultant engineer’s approval of the contractor’s submissionsSweis et al. [61], Frimpong et al. [117], Aibinu and Odeyinka [124]
10Delay in issuance of the consultant engineer’s instructionsNiazi and Painting [52]
11Slow consultant engineer’s response to contractor inquiriesSweis et al. [61]
12Problems due to the consultant’s organization Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
13Slow owner’s responsesArditi et al. [45]
14Failure of the owner to give timely orders/instructions Yates [55]
15Excessive bureaucracy arising from owner managementFaridi and El-Sayegh [112], Ramanathan et al. [110], Mpofu et al. [87], Alshihri et al. [29], Yang and Wei [101]
16Slow decision-making process by the ownerKeane et al. [64], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
17Insufficient structure linking all parties in the projectMaqbool and Rashid [62], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Chan and Kumaraswamy [20]
18Slow decision-making process by all project teamsChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Frimpong et al. [117]
19Slow decision-making within each project teamChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Frimpong et al. [117]
20Lack of responsibility of project manager/contractorArditi et al. [45]
21Lack of contractor’s authority Arditi et al. [45]
22Lack of timely corrective decisions by contractor/project managerArditi et al. [45]
23Slow response from contractor/project managerArditi et al. [45]
24Delay in preparation of contractor deliverablesSweis et al. [61], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
25Problems arising from the contractor’s company organizationAl-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
26Unilateral decisions taken by the owner without contractual considerationsAlnuaimi et al. [37], Jadhav and Bhirud [114]
27Contractor’s internal problems Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
28Consultant’s internal problems Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Alshihri et al. [29]
29Ill-defined duties and responsibilities by the contractorArditi et al. [45]
30Contractor’s inadequate decision-making mechanismArditi et al. [45]
31Delay in consultant’s approval of major changes in the scope of workAl-Kharashi and Skitmore [47], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Gunduz et al. [70]
32A large number of participants in the projectArditi et al. [45]
33Involvement of several contractors/foreign contractorsArditi et al. [45]
34Project commissioning and ownership transferChang [88]
35Lack of strategic planningKeane et al. [64], Balbaa et al. [77], Staiti et al. [54], Badawy [14]
Level 1: Contractual Document and Contract Management
Level 2: Project Scope Management
1Technology complexitySun and Meng [21], Keane et al. [64]
2Technical challengesCharles et al. [125]
3Complexity of projectZadeh et al. [40], Olawale and Sun [109]
4Project characteristicsChanmeka et al. [116]
5Project sizeKhalafallah and Shalaby [126], Chanmeka et al. [116]
6Inadequate project objectivesBadawy [14], Ali Kamal Balbaa et al. [77], Keane et al. [64]
7Inadequate scope of work for contractorBakr [82], Mohammad et al. [4]
8Ambiguous scope of workSafapour and Kermanshachi [108], Tran et al. [127], Nguyen and Do [90]
9Risk and uncertainty associated with projectsOlawale and Sun [109]
10Poor scope definitionYang and Wei [101], Prasad et al. [63]
Level 2: Tendering and Project Delivery
1Type of project tenderingAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Bajjou and Chafi [115], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
2Type of construction contractAssaf and Al-Hejji [23]
3Inappropriate choice of project delivery systemIlter and Çelik [111]
4Inappropriate choice of contract typeIlter and Çelik [111]
5Lack of contractor’s field visit to the site during the biddingAlshihri et al. [29]
6Exceptionally low bidsYap et al. [99], Ilter and Çelik [111], Ramanathan et al. [110], Prasad et al. [63]
7Insufficient time for bid preparationEnshassi et al. [35]
8Type of construction contract/project delivery systemChoudhry et al. [69], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
9Selection of inappropriate type of main constructionChan and Kumaraswamy [20]
10Inappropriate contractor or consultant selectionİlter and Çelik [111], Arditi et al. [45]
11Non-feasibility of construction methodologyPadala et al. [3]
12Improper project feasibility studyArditi et al. [45]
13Unclear contract language and translationBakr [82]
14Ambiguous contract termsAmeyaw et al. [97]
15Faulty negotiations and obtaining of contractsAbd El-Razek et al. [86], Ramanathan et al. [110]
16Improper subcontractor selectionMahamid [5]
17Low consultancy feeAlnuaimi et al. [37]
18Client’s late contract awardAljohani et al. [79], Bramble and Callahan [113]
19Inadequate and unclear information provided by the consultant in the tender documentsJadhav and Bhirud [114], Alnuaimi et al. [37]
20Contract awarded to the lowest bidderAlshihri et al. [29], Prasad et al. [63]
Level 2: Contract Document Management
1Unfair risk allocation in contractsDo et al. [102], Arditi et al. [45]
2Conflicts among contract documentsBakr [82], Ameyaw et al. [97], Mohammad et al. [4], Enshassi et al. [35]
3The existence of errors and incomplete information in the pricing documentWu et al. [7]
4Improper or wrong cost estimationAlmasi et al. [71], Prasad et al. [63]
5Errors in contract documents due to the ownerRashid et al. [57], Günhan et al. [128], Arditi et al. [45]
6Errors in contract documents due to contractorRashid et al. [57], Arditi et al. [45]
7Owner’s contract modifications Günhan et al. [128]
8Unrealistic contract duration imposed in contractAlshihri et al. [29], Mpofu et al. [87], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56], Prasad et al. [63]
9Existence of gray areas in general conditions and request variations to the contractAlnuaimi et al. [37]
10Incomplete/erroneous contract documentationSafapour et al. [41], Yap and Tan [50]
11Misinterpretation of contract documentsPerera et al. [68], Padala et al. [3]
12Poor contract familiarityHassanein and El Nemr [129], Hilali et al. [58]
13Difference in contract interpretationRashid et al. [57]
14Absence of financial rewards for completing the project earlierAlshihri et al. [29], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
15Ineffective delay penalties in contractAlshihri et al. [29], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
16Inappropriate contact formHsieh et al. [85], Toor and Ogunlana [59]
17Ambiguities in contract clausesGunduz et al. [70]
18Poor contract administrationTran et al. [127], Hansen et al. [36]
19Poor contract management by consultant/contractorShoar et al. [51], Ilter and Celik [111], Frimpong et al. [117]
20Non-use of professional contract managementAbd El-Razek et al. [86]
21Legal disputes between various partiesAlshihri et al. [29], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
22Inaccurate estimates—errors or omissions in quantity estimating/inaccurate bills of quantitiesYap et al. [99]
23Unreasonable estimation and adjustment of the project costMaqbool and Rashid [62], Ilter and Celik [111], Lee [92]
24Underestimates or omissions by the consultantChang [88]
25Erroneous, incomplete, or inaccurate pricing documentsWu et al. [104]
26Contract and specification interpretation disagreementOlawale and Sun [109]
Level 1: Design Process
Level 2: Problems in Design
1Errors and omissions in designIsmail et al. [10], Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Nguyen and Do [90], Project 1, Project 4
2Inadequate shop drawing detailsMohammad et al. [4], Staiti et al. [54], Hanif et al. [76], Keane et al. [64]
3Unclear and inadequate details in the drawingKumar [28], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Keane et al. [64]
4Incomplete/Defective/Poor design drawings, specifications, or documentsWu et al. [104], Yap et al. [99], Prasad et al. [63], Project 1, Project 2, Project 6
5Errors and omissions in design documents and specificationsYap et al. [99], Ilter and Celik [111], Keane et al. [64]
6Citation of inadequate specificationHsieh et al. [85]
7Poor design quality—improper/wrong/impractical designChang et al. [105], Keane et al. [64], Project 6
8Inconsistency between drawings and site conditionsHsieh et al. [85], Ilter and Celik [111]
9Errors and discrepancies in design documentsChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
10Outdated designs and specificationsYap and Skitmore [8]
11Ineffective design by the consultantAlnuaimi et al. [37], Jadhav and Bhirud [114]
12Lack of design informationMotawa et al. [95], Peansupap and Cheang [80]
13Poor quality design documentationLopez et al. [100]
14Errors/changes in the design criteria provided by the employerPrasad et al. [63]
Level 2: Changes in Design
1Design function change due to the client’s requirementPeansupap and Cheang [80], Prasad et al. [63]
2Design changes by consultantEnshassi et al. [35], Mohammad et al. [4], Keane et al. [64]
3Plan changes by owner/clientMohammad et al. [4]
4Specification changes by the ownerGunduz and Khan [118], Enshassi et al. [35], Keane et al. [64]
5Specification changes by the designerPeansupap and Cheang [80]
6Specification changes by the consultantKeane et al. [64]
7Change due to poor and incomplete design Peansupap and Cheang [80]
8Design changes due to inconsistent site conditionsPeansupap and Cheang [80]
9Design changes due to poor brief, errors, and omissionsPeansupap and Cheang [80], Sun and Meng [21], Yang and Chen [78]
10Design changes due to design deficiencyRashid et al. [57]
Level 2: Design Procedure
1Inadequate data collection before designAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Shoar et al. [51]
2Inadequate site investigation before designAbad et al. [91], Wu et al. [7]
3Poor material/equipment investigation before designWu et al. [7], Project 3
4Problems in the preparation and approval of shop drawingsAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Mpofu et al. [87]
5Conflicts between the designers and foreign designersToor and Ogunlana [59], Safapour and Kermanshachi [108], Arditi et al. [45]
6Discrepancy in original design specificationsDosumu and Aigbavboa [66]
7Non-use of the earned value management methodLee [92]
8Poor application of standardization in designToor and Ogunlana [59], Arditi et al. [45]
9Non-use of advanced engineering design softwareAssaf and Al-Hejji [23]
10Delays in the delivery of design information Chan and Kumaraswamy [20]
11Late revision and approval of design documents by the ownerBajjou and Chafi [115], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Mpofu et al. [87], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
12Delays in drawing revision and distributionBramble and Callahan [113]
13Delays in approval of drawingsChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Maqbool and Rashid [62], Ramanathan et al. [110]
14Delays in design document preparationChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Mpofu et al. [87], Prasad et al. [63]
15Delays in design error correctionBramble and Callahan [113]
16Slow consultant’s responses to review and approval of design documents Assaf and Al-Hejji [23]
17Slow consultant’s responses to preparation and approval of shop drawingsChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
18Slow owner’s responses to review and approval of design documents, schedules, and materialsGunduz et al. [70], Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
19Discrepancy between design specification and building codeMpofu et al. [87]
20Over-design increasing the overall costArditi et al. [45]
Level 2: Design Properties
1Complex interfacesLee [92], Prasad et al. [63]
2Complexity of project designAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Keane et al. [64]
3Low constructability of designChoudhry et al. [69], Arditi et al. [45], Prasad et al. [63]
Level 1: Project Implementation
Level 2: Mobilization of Construction Site
1Delay in providing utilities (such as water, and electricity)Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Alshihri et al. [29], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
2Lack of utilities (such as water, electricity, phone, etc.) on siteMarzouk and El-Rasas [56]
3Lack of temporary facilities (such as office buildings etc.)Mpofu et al. [87], Arditi et al. [45]
4External work (such as roads, utilities, and public services) due to public obligationsAlaghbari et al. [49]
5Difficulties in obtaining energy (electricity, fuel)Arditi et al. [45]
6Delay in site mobilizationAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Alshihri et al. [29], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
7Slow mobilization of equipmentGunduz et al. [70], Project 3
8Slow mobilization and demobilization of laborKumar [28]
9Subcontractor’s slow mobilizationBajjou and Chafi [115], Ramanathan et al. [110]
Level 2: Logistics
1Transportation delays beyond the controlAlaghbari et al. [49]
2Poor logistic controlYang and Chen [78], Sun and Meng [21]
Level 2: Construction Methodology
1Problems in the introduction of new construction methodologyShoar et al. [51], Wu et al. [104], Padala et al. [3], Sun and Meng [21]
2Technology changesErdogan et al. [130], Keane et al. [64]
3Changes in construction methodology due to newly emerging site conditionsWu et al. [7]
4Using outdated construction methodology and technologiesArditi et al. [45], Alnuaimi et al. [37]
5Improper construction methods/techniques implemented by the contractorAjayi and Chinda [48]
6Problems in off-site prefabricationChan and Kumaraswamy [20]
Level 2: Subcontract Management
1Unavailability of the construction groupFaridi and El-Sayegh [112]
2Frequent change of subcontractors due to their poor performanceAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Kumar [28], Niazi and Painting [52]
3Poor subcontract managementYap et al. [42]
4Poor subcontracting (system)Chan and Kumaraswamy [20]
5Incapable subcontractorAlaghbari et al. [49]
6Inexperienced subcontractorAlaghbari et al. [49]
7Untrustful subcontractorsGunduz et al. [70]
8Long required time for finding appropriate subcontractors Abd El-Razek et al. [86]
9Delays in appointing a subcontractorSun and Meng [21]
10Degree of subcontractingChan and Kumaraswamy [20]
Level 2: Productivity Issues
1Defective workmanshipMahamid [5], Jarkas and Mubarak [18], Badawy [14]
2Workmanship not meeting the specificationIsmail et al. [10], Mohammad et al. [4]
3Delays in contractor’s field survey Al-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
4Delays caused by subcontractorFaten Albtoush et al. [74]
5Accelerating worksWu et al. [104]
6Inadequate contractor’s workKumar [28]
7Construction errors and defective workYap et al. [99]
8Delays in construction activitiesLee [92]
9Excessive scope changes and constructive change ordersSweis et al. [61], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56], Arditi et al. [45]
10Inappropriate technical work by the contractor during the tender phaseSweis et al. [61], Prasad et al. [63]
11Errors committed during field construction on siteRamanathan et al. [110]
12Rework due to errors during constructionKumar [28], Assaf and Al-Hejji [23], Rachid et al. [123]
13 Poor performance of the owner’s workforceTurner and Turner [131], Yates [55]
14Work suspension by the ownerAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Maqbool and Rashid [62], Mpofu et al. [87], Sweis et al. [61], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
15Low contractor productivitySun and Meng [21]
16Poor workmanshipChan and Kumaraswamy [20], Sun and Meng [21], Ali Kamal Balbaa et al. [77]
17Low subcontractors’ productivityBajjou and Chafi [115]
18Interference with other trades (trade stacking)Hanna et al. [44]
19Inappropriate/Inadequate use (misuse) of materialNiazi and Painting [52]
20Addition/omission of scopeYap and Skitmore [8]
21Extra works imposed by the ownerTurner and Turner [131]
22Change orders during constructionAlshihri et al. [29]
23Change in scope of work Ameyaw et al. [97], Keane et al. [64]
24Poorly executed design drawingsWu et al. [104]
Level 1: Macro Factors
Level 2: Societal Factors
1NationalizationKumar [28]
2Residents’ protests may result in modifications or halts to the peripheral details’ construction.Wu et al. [104]
3Effects of social and cultural factorsAssaf and Al-Hejji [23], Perera et al. [68]
4Labor disputeWaty and Sulistio [32]
5Civil unrestKumar [28]
6Fraudulent practices and kickbacksMpofu et al. [87], Prasad et al. [63]
7Public strikesAlmasi et al. [71], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
8The effects of changing demographics on labor supply and demandSun and Meng [21], Erdogan et al. [130]
9Change in demandAlmasi et al. [71]
Level 2: Political Factors
1Internal political problemsPerera et al. [68], Enshassi et al. [35]
2Political instabilityAlshihri et al. [29]
3Political pressure to complete the project ahead of the scheduleAlshihri et al. [29]
4Government interventionDo et al. [102]
5Government policiesMpofu et al. [87]
6Wars in regionAlshihri et al. [29], Almasi et al. [71]
Level 2: Economic Factors
1Cycle of economic development and how it affects demandSun and Meng [21]
2Economic instabilityAlshihri et al. [29], Perera et al. [68]
3Freight/Economic embargoesAlmasi et al. [71]
4Labor, material, and plant price inflationPadala et al. [3], Sun and Meng [21]
5Market competitionSun and Meng [21]
6Inflation/Escalation of pricesAlshihri et al. [29], Rahman et al. [6], Arditi et al. [45]
7Import/Export RestrictionsAlshihri et al. [29]
8Price adjustments for commodities in contracts with fixed or unit pricesAlshihri et al. [29], Sweis et al. [61]
9Unforeseeable financial and economic crisesMpofu et al. [87], Arditi et al. [45]
10Price/Financial fluctuationsSun and Meng [21]
11Fluctuation of exchange rate/currencyYap et al. [31], Alshihri et al. [29], Olawale and Sun [109]
12Changes in interest ratesYap et al. [31], Aljohani et al. [79], Arditi et al. [45]
13Changes in tax ratesYap et al. [31], Alshihri et al. [29], Annamalaisami and Kuppuswamy [94]
Level 2: Influence of external stakeholders
1Issues brought on by hold-up workAl-Kharashi and Skitmore [47]
2Difficulties in obtaining work permits from the authoritiesAlshihri et al. [29], Varghese et al. [107]
3Previous construction delays by other contractorsWu et al. [104]
4Problem with adjacent propertiesYap and Skitmore [8], Ramanathan et al. [110]
5Work damaged by othersLerche et al. [67]
6Associated causesWu et al. [7]
7Opposition of neighboring communitySun and Meng [21], Padala et al. [3], Arefazar et al. [19]
8Residential requirementsPadala et al. [3]
9Changes made due to modifications by other organizationsWu et al. [104], Sun and Meng [21]
10Non-cooperation from labor unionsArditi et al. [45]
11Routine of government authoritiesMpofu et al. [87]
12Lack of cooperation from local authoritiesArditi et al. [45]
Level 2: Rules and Regulations
1Acquiring required permits/approvals from the municipality/different government authoritiesSun and Meng [21], Alshihri et al. [29], Mpofu et al. [87], Marzouk and El-Rasas [56]
2New government regulationsIsmail et al. [10], Mahamid [5]
3Obtaining (working) permits for laborersSweis et al. [61], Ramanathan et al. [110]
4Legislative or policy changesErdogan et al. [130], Padala et al. [3]
5Lack of engineering licenses to protect the quality of consulting servicesAlnuaimi et al. [37]
6Lack of construction guidelines and proceduresAlnuaimi et al. [37]
7Changes owing to policy or regulations changesWu et al. [7]
8Changes in legislation on employment, and working conditionsSun and Meng [21]
9Changes in government policies (environmental protection, sustainability, waste recycling, brownfield use, etc.)Sun and Meng [21], Yap and Skitmore [8]
10Weak regulation and controlOlawale and Sun [109]
11Change in LawsAnnamalaisami and Kuppuswamy [94], Perera et al. [68], Yap and Skitmore [8]
12Quarantine restrictionsTrauner et al. [89]
13Changes in government regulationsPerera et al. [68], Do et al. [102], Yap and Skitmore [8], Sweis et al. [61]
14Obtaining transportation permitFaridi and El-Sayegh [112]
15Building permit approval processAbd El-Razek et al. [86]
16Prevention of contractor’s resourceTurner and Turner [131]
17Procurement problems due to statutory actionsTurner and Turner [131]
18A body’s statutory obligationsTurner and Turner [131]
19Legal issues because of existing rules and regulationsToor and Ogunlana [59]
20Challenges in acquiring construction licensesArditi et al. [45]
21Changes in standards/normsLee [92]

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Figure 1. Flowchart of the research.
Figure 1. Flowchart of the research.
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Figure 2. Distribution of the studies by year.
Figure 2. Distribution of the studies by year.
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Figure 3. Distribution of the studies by country.
Figure 3. Distribution of the studies by country.
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Figure 4. Main categories and the number of change causes assigned to these categories.
Figure 4. Main categories and the number of change causes assigned to these categories.
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Table 1. Profile of the participants who attended case study—validation.
Table 1. Profile of the participants who attended case study—validation.
ParticipantProjectOrganization TypeExperience of the ParticipantProject TypeOwner Type
Ptp. 1Project 1Contractor6–10Manufacturing hallPrivate
Ptp. 2Project 2Consultant16–20Student Dormitory BuildingPublic
Ptp. 3Project 3Client>20Administrative BuildingPublic
Ptp. 4Project 4Contractor>20Infrastructure (sewerage system)Public
Ptp. 5Project 5Contractor>20HospitalPublic
Ptp. 6Project 6Contractor6–10HighwayPublic
Table 2. Profile of the participants who attended FGD.
Table 2. Profile of the participants who attended FGD.
ParticipantOrganization TypeExperience of the ParticipantRole of the Participant
Participant 1Contractor>20Project Manager
Participant 2Consultant16–20Owner
Participant 3Client10–15Project Manager
Participant 4Consultant>20Owner
Participant 5Contractor>20Head of the planning department
Participant 6Contractor10–15Planning Engineer
Table 3. Proposed change causes taxonomy.
Table 3. Proposed change causes taxonomy.
Level 1 (Categories)Level 2 (Subcategories)
Human resources- Human Resource Management
- Availability of Human Resources
- Capabilities
Material- Procurement Process of Materials
- Availability and Variety of Materials
- Storage of Materials in the Construction Site
- Quality of Procured Materials
Other resources- Procurement and Delivery of Equipment and Machines
- Availability of Equipment and Machines in the Market
- Repair and Maintenance Facilities
- Productivity of Machines and Equipment
- Quality of Machines and Equipment
Financial Factors- Cashflows
- Financing Conditions
- Resources Cost
- Contract and Overhead Costs
External Factors- Weather
- Catastrophes
- Environmental Problems
- Security Problems
Health and Safety Concerns- Safety Concerns
- Health Concerns
Project Location- Ground Conditions
- Construction Site Conditions
- Accessibility and Possession
Project Stakeholders
(Contractor, Client, Consultant, Designer, etc.)
- Project Stakeholders’ Competence and Experience
- Project Stakeholders’ Expectations
- Project Stakeholders’ Culture and Ethics
Project Management - Construction Site Management
- Project Quality Management
- Project Time Management
- Project Communication Management
- Project Organization
Contract Document and Contract Management- Project Scope Management
- Tendering and Project delivery
- Contract Document Management
Design Process- Problems in Design
- Changes in Design
- Design Procedure
- Design Properties
Project Implementation- Mobilization of Construction Site
- Logistics
- Construction Methodology
- Subcontract Management
- Productivity Issues
Macro Factors- Societal Factors
- Political Factors
- Economic Factors
- Influence of External Stakeholders
- Rules and Regulations
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Birgonul, Z.; Budayan, C.; Koc, K. Development of a Taxonomy for Causes of Changes in Construction Projects. Buildings 2024, 14, 278. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010278

AMA Style

Birgonul Z, Budayan C, Koc K. Development of a Taxonomy for Causes of Changes in Construction Projects. Buildings. 2024; 14(1):278. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010278

Chicago/Turabian Style

Birgonul, Zeynep, Cenk Budayan, and Kerim Koc. 2024. "Development of a Taxonomy for Causes of Changes in Construction Projects" Buildings 14, no. 1: 278. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010278

APA Style

Birgonul, Z., Budayan, C., & Koc, K. (2024). Development of a Taxonomy for Causes of Changes in Construction Projects. Buildings, 14(1), 278. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14010278

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