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Susan Hayhow

Researcher at Birmingham City University

Publications -  7
Citations -  64

Susan Hayhow is an academic researcher from Birmingham City University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Waterproofing & Change management. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 28 citations.

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The antecedents of construction project change: an analysis of design and build procurement application

TL;DR: In this article, the causal nexus of change during the construction phase is assessed and delineated; the key affecting factors are thematically grouped under headings: extent and severity; time in relation to implementing; instigating party; individual(s) responsible for managing the change; reason for the change, available resource; recoverable or non-recoverable; contract / project type; type of client.
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An Investigation Into The Role Of The Quantity Surveyor In The Value Management Workshop Process

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the value management workshop process and specifically identify the roles and responsibilities of the Quantity Surveyor within this process, which is then used to develop a novel template value management workshops that provides a platform for educating future Quantity Surveying and other construction professionals.
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Investigating Effective Waterproofing Materials in Preventing Roof Leaking; Initial Comparative Study: Malaysia, U.K.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focused on the waterproofing materials used for real project samples involving real problem mainly with roof related leakage mostly happened in Malaysia and some cases in the United Kingdom and highlighted typical problem facing with the building leakage within the humid warm tropical climate as well as highlighting some obvious leakage scenario found within the opposite four season's climate in the UK.
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Construct-it: A board game to enhance built environment students’ understanding of the property life cycle:

TL;DR: The development of a board game entitled ‘Construct-it’ is investigated as an innovative pedagogical approach to augmenting the applied knowledge and understanding of built environment students studying property life cycle analysis.
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Analysis and modelling of social housing repair and maintenance costs: A UK case study

TL;DR: In this paper , the complexities of repair and maintenance (R&M) associated with social housing and specifically, develops benchmark indicators for such works are investigated, with the ambition being to provide a knowledge sharing analysis of costs expended that allows a social housing provider to learn from past works undertaken with a view to optimising future practice.