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July 3, 2026
For a long time, the construction industry has followed a systematic approach to project delivery. In this approach designers build the concept, engineers refine it at industrial capacity, contractors estimate the cost, and owners approve the budget or further optimize it through value engineering. That is the conventional process, which has been a part of the system for years and has also been turning around successful projects at different capacities. However, with increasing project complexity and tighter budgets, modern construction projects demand more collaborative and cost-driven approaches. This is where Target Value Delivery (TVD) comes into play.
Target Value Delivery allows teams to seamlessly collaborate and commit to a streamlined project planning and decision-making process. The TVD process offers a framework that allows for balancing different facets of costs, quality, and sustainability, cutting through different stakeholder interests from the very starting point.
TVD is an integrated project delivery methodology that focuses on executing projects aiming at minimized costs while delivering optimized value. Target Value Delivery follows lean principles of project delivery. TVD promotes a project delivery system that aligns design, engineering, procurement, and construction activities with the predetermined project cost.
The approach here is simply kept around defined cost parameters. The pivotal question that the tradition systems ask may revolve around something like, "How much will this design cost?"
On the contrary, a Target Value Delivery methodology emphasizes asking questions like, "How can we design the best possible project within the owner's budget while maximizing value?"
This is the core difference in approach of the TVD process as compared to the traditional processes.
The methodology originates from lean construction principles. The Lean Construction Institute developed these principles by taking inspiration from Toyota's pioneering industry practices.
The core philosophy underlines these standards:
As a result, teams achieve outputs that fulfill budgetary requirements while keeping the overall value and long-term performance targets addressed.
Also Read: Value Engineering Explained – Maximizing Value, Minimizing Costs in Construction Projects
The following core principles guide the TVD process.
At the base of it, everything begins with identifying and specifying what is truly valued by the owner. These may include functional requirements, occupant comfort, operational efficiency, ease of maintenance, construction quality, turnaround time, and sustainability. Besides that, of course, the cost factors are included. These priorities drive every project decision, and the team executes each decision in alignment with the owner's value roadmap.
It's the responsibility of the project team to establish the target cost at the beginning itself in the TVD approach. It acts as a fixed design constraint rather than a figure that the project team modifies later. Unlike other budgeting approaches where costs are calculated after the design process is completed, in TVD approach it is mandatory for the designers and constructors to create design alternatives that fit into the budget that has been fixed earlier itself. Also, this approach fosters innovation and creativity.
The collaboration of the various project stakeholders from the very beginning is one of the most important characteristics of the TVD approach. These project stakeholders are the owner, architect, engineers, contractors, suppliers, and cost consultants. They all collaborate on the common objectives of the project. The involvement of all these people at once in collaboration is an integrated team effort. This leads to fast decisions and better design choices.
TVD involves cost validation throughout the design development process. However, in the conventional approach, it only applies in the end. Throughout the course of design development, the team will keep comparing the cost estimates made to the predetermined target budget. This process helps the team detect cost overruns early. This allows teams to make necessary changes in time in order to avoid major repercussions.
Another key concept of TVD is that of continuous improvement. Here, teams working on projects are encouraged to continuously look for ways to increase value without defying budgetary objectives. During the project cycle, the project team assesses many options. These include the use of better materials, process improvement, new construction methods, technology usage, and the process of prefabrication/modularization. The goal is not merely to reduce costs but rather to add value to the project within the budget constraints.
A typical Target Value Delivery workflow consists of several interconnected steps and phases:
In Phase 1, the project team determines the owner's value objectives. Here, instead of focusing only on the technical aspects of the project, the project team identifies the priorities of the owner in terms of desirable results, necessary attributes, anticipated performance, efficiency of operations, and sustainability considerations. This enables the team to define the concept of value clearly. This ensures that every design and construction decision made subsequently could be according to the owner's value objectives. The project team then defines the identified priorities as measurable project goals.
Once the project team establishes the owner's value objectives, it defines a realistic target project cost. As compared to the traditional approach, which defines the cost of the project after designing the same, this approach establishes the cost before the design based on several factors, including the funding ability of the owner, market conditions, risk considerations, and business expectations from the project.
Target Value Delivery emphasizes bringing together all key project participants at the earliest stages of project development. Rather than wait until the design phase to have their input, various stakeholders come together in the early phases of the project. Their input makes for improved constructability, cost savings, reduced risk, and improved decision-making.
In the collaborative design process, different types of multi-disciplinary teams come together to design solutions that meet the project goals. Unlike the process of carrying out separate reviews of designs, all these parties join hands to work as a team. The team evaluates every decision by considering cost, schedule, constructability, sustainability, quality, and long-term maintenance factors.
Continuous cost monitoring is a key aspect of Target Value Delivery. During the design phase, the team continuously performs cost modeling. The team compares each cost model with the pre-set target budget. Rather than finding out at the time of the tendering or procurement phase whether the project is feasible from a financial point of view or not, teams try to get cost information continuously during the entire design phase.
When cost overruns become evident through cost control, the team works together to find avenues for value enhancement. It may involve evaluation of alternative materials, modular building techniques, structural optimization, or MEP coordination. The teams need to understand that it is not just about minimizing costs but retaining the functionality and performance of the project as well.
The Target Value Delivery does not end when construction commences; it ensures that the performance of the project is consistent with the goals set. Throughout implementation, constant reviews are done on the areas of productivity, procurement systems, utilization of materials, wastage, quality, and cost performance. Feedback sessions aid in identifying areas that need to be improved upon. Teams learn lessons during construction and apply them to future projects, ensuring continuous improvement.
Target Value Delivery is a revolution in terms of the planning, designing, and implementation of construction projects. Rather than using costs as constraints that are evaluated only after the process of design is complete, TVD puts the issues of value and budget right at the forefront of all decisions made about the project from the very beginning. With the integration of lean construction principles, project teams can ensure better collaboration, cost certainty, quality, and reduced waste.
As construction projects grow more complex and budgets become tighter, Target Value Delivery helps balance innovation with financial discipline. Companies that embrace TVD can deliver projects that closely align with client expectations while optimizing resource utilization. By minimizing rework and improving collaboration, they create greater long-term value and achieve better overall project outcomes. In today's world where digital transformation plays a crucial role, TVD is not just an emerging practice but the foundation of modern project management in construction.
Most construction teams finalize their designs and then discover the costs are way over budget. Target Value Delivery turns that sequence around entirely. The project team locks in the target cost before design work begins. Every single decision from that point forward has to fit within that number. This one shift changes everything about how the project runs.
Target Value Design is the practical method that keeps design decisions financially honest during the design phase. Project teams price each idea as it develops rather than sending a completed design package to an estimator weeks later. When something costs too much, the team reworks it on the spot instead of carrying an unaffordable concept all the way into construction documents.
Traditional delivery gives designers wide creative freedom with very little cost feedback along the way. By the time estimators review the drawings, expensive decisions are already deeply embedded in the design. Changing them at that stage costs huge money and time. TVD prevents that pattern by keeping the target cost visible and active throughout every phase rather than treating it as a final checkpoint.
Lean principles allow construction teams to test every step of the design and construction process and ask whether it adds true value to the project or not. Teams that apply lean thinking with TVD process seriously tend to find hidden costs and time that are highly effective for achieving faster development.
The target cost functions as a shared accountability tool that every project team member references when evaluating options. When a design idea or construction method pushes spending beyond the defined target, the team treats that as a problem to solve together rather than a reason to ask the owner for more budget. This collective ownership of the number is what makes TVD different from simply setting a budget and hoping for the best.
Change orders typically exist because design and construction teams discover conflicts late. Usually, fixing them requires paid rework. TVD surfaces those conflicts during the design phase when adjustments are still relatively inexpensive to make. By the time a TVD project reaches active construction, most scope and cost tensions have already been resolved through deliberate team conversation rather than costly field modifications.
On a properly structured TVD project, trade contractors join design conversations several months before construction begins rather than receiving finished drawings to price and build from. They contribute real cost and constructability knowledge while the design is still flexible enough to absorb it. This early integration is genuinely difficult to achieve under traditional delivery methods where roles stay separate until bidding.
Project teams need frequent and honest cost conversations built into the TVD process rather than monthly budget reports that arrive after the damage is already done. Teams that meet regularly to compare current design decisions against the remaining target cost balance catch problems while they still have affordable solutions available. Waiting four months to check the numbers defeats the core purpose of the entire approach.
This situation is actually where Target Value Delivery provides its clearest value to owners. Rather than quietly absorbing the gap into the contingency or cutting scope without explanation, the team brings the trade-off directly to the client with transparent options laid out. Owners get to make an informed choice about what they prioritize rather than discovering after construction that quality or scope was reduced without their knowledge.
Owners who complete TVD projects often report final costs that stay close to the original target. They also experience fewer disputes, faster decisions, and stronger team collaboration. The entire project team stays focused on protecting client value.
TVD removes the professional distance that normally exists between designers, engineers, and builders during the development phases of a project. Everyone contributes to achieving the target cost together. The typical pattern of designers blaming builders for cost overruns and builders blaming designers for impractical details disappears with the TVD process massively.
Smaller projects may not need the full formal structure like big building constructions. However, the core TVD idea scales down cleanly. Designing around a defined target cost rather than designing freely and calculating costs afterward improves outcomes at any building scale. Project teams working on mid-size facilities consistently find the TVD useful.
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