Maintenance risk reduction for effective facilities management

Purpose - Insufficient investment in facilities management organizations lead to postponement of major repairs and replacements of facilities. Lack of centralized information within an organization on the assessment of deficiencies and conditions in the facilities causes these projects to be carried...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of facilities management Vol. 6; no. 1; pp. 52 - 68
Main Authors Chandrashekaran, Anand, Gopalakrishnan, Bhaskaran
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bingley Emerald Group Publishing Limited 22.02.2008
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Purpose - Insufficient investment in facilities management organizations lead to postponement of major repairs and replacements of facilities. Lack of centralized information within an organization on the assessment of deficiencies and conditions in the facilities causes these projects to be carried out at the cost of critical replacements and repairs. This paper aims to describe a facilities condition assessment methodology and a tool.Design methodology approach - In this paper, the physical condition and maintenance deficiencies of heating ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) type of equipment are assessed at its component level using failure checkpoints. The existing conditions of six cooling towers located at West Virginia University were assessed at the component level and an overall condition score was generated by the tool.Findings - The tool helped to assess checkpoints on the components and identify the potential risk component and its impact.Research limitations implications - When facilities managers initiate this structured assessment methodology based on a periodic frequency, the facilities availability and life is maximized apart from reducing overall risk.Practical implications - The contributions of this paper include the use of a common and comprehensive methodology for HVAC physical condition assessments and risk assessment of component failure impact.Originality value - This paper eliminates the most evident scoring limitations in the literature such as "equal numbers or ties," "summation of lower priority scores exceeding the higher priority score," and the need for a "cost estimator." A unique formula was determined for the scoring technique.
Bibliography:filenameID:3080060104
istex:9419241BEED1945E3513C4DB2534EB984005BEAD
original-pdf:3080060104.pdf
ark:/67375/4W2-CHKKG6K0-2
href:14725960810847468.pdf
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ISSN:1472-5967
1741-0983
DOI:10.1108/14725960810847468