Asset management….

Transcription

Asset management….
A Primer on
Facility Asset Management
Presented by William Faesenmeier
Presenter
Bill Faesenmeier
Facilities Asset Management Product Manager
 24 years experience in Consulting Engineering industry
 Areas of Specialization
> Facilities Engineering, Facilities Asset Management
> Facility condition assessments, asbestos and lead-based paint consulting, ADA surveys,
>
environmental site assessments, industrial hygiene, indoor air quality, construction lender
representation services, code compliance reviews
Information management systems, software design
 10 years experience in Architecture, Real Estate Development and Construction
Management
 Bachelor’s degree in Environmental Design with a focus on Architecture, Miami University
Today’s Agenda
 Data Sources
 Definitions
 Supporting Software
 Focus on Facility and Space Management Tools
 Value of a CPMS
 Q&A
DEFINING & EXPLAINING
TERMS &
DEFINITIONS
What is Facility Asset
Management?
What is Facility Asset
Management?
What is Facility Asset
Management?
Definition:
Facility Asset Management
fa·cil·i·ty - something designed, built, installed, etc., to serve a specific function affording a
convenience or service: transportation facilities; educational facilities; a new research
facility
as·set - a useful and desirable thing or quality. An item of ownership convertible into cash;
total resources of a person or business, as cash, notes and accounts receivable, securities,
inventories, goodwill, fixtures, machinery, or real estate (opposed to liabilities)
man·age·ment -the act or manner of managing
man·age - to take charge or care of
Definitions from Dictionary.com
Definition:
Facility Asset Management
man·age - to take charge or care of
fa·cil·i·ty - something designed, built, installed, etc., to serve a specific function affording a
convenience or service: transportation facilities; educational facilities; a new research
facility
as·set - a useful and desirable thing or quality. An item of ownership convertible into cash;
total resources of a person or business, as cash, notes and accounts receivable, securities,
inventories, goodwill, fixtures, machinery, or real estate (opposed to liabilities)
Wikipedia Definition
Asset management…. refers to any system that monitors
and maintains things of value to an entity or group
“Too Broad”
Wikipedia
FHWA/AASHTO Definition
“Asset management is a systematic process of maintaining, upgrading, and
operating physical assets cost-effectively.
It combines engineering principles with sound business practices and economic
theory, and it provides tools to facilitate a more organized, logical approach to
decision-making.
Thus, asset management provides a framework for handling both short- and longrange planning.”
Asset Management: Advancing the State of the Art Into the 21st Century Through Public-Private Dialogue, FHWA and AASHTO, 1996
APWA Definition
“Asset management is………..a methodology needed by those
who are responsible for efficiently allocating generally
insufficient funds amongst valid and competing needs.”
The American Public Works Association Asset Management Task Force
EAM Definition
Enterprise asset management is the business processes and enabling
information systems that support management of an organization's assets, both
physical assets, called "tangible", and non-physical, "intangible" assets.
Not bad…..
but still too broad…..
and we don’t deal with intangible assets.
Wikipedia
IAM Definition
Infrastructure asset management is the combination of management, financial, economic,
engineering, and other practices applied to physical assets with the objective of providing
the required level of service in the most cost-effective manner.
It includes the management of the whole life cycle (design, construction, commissioning,
operating, maintaining, repairing, modifying, replacing and decommissioning/disposal) of
physical and infrastructure assets.[1]
Operating and sustainment of assets in a constrained budget environment require some sort
of prioritization scheme.[2]
[1] Local Government and Municipal Knowledge Base
[2] Wikipedia
PAM Definition
Public asset management (also referred to as corporate asset
management) expands the definition of enterprise asset
management (EAM) by incorporating the management of all things
of value to a municipal jurisdiction and its citizens' expectations
Again……….
primarily speaks to public sector, utilities, property
and transport systems
Desirable Features
of an Asset Management Program
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Customer focused
Mission driven
System oriented
Long-term in outlook
Accessible and user friendly
Flexible
U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration Office of Asset Management, 1999
What Should it Include
 Strategic goals
 Inventory of assets (physical and
human resources)
 Valuation of assets
 Quantitative condition and
performance measures
 Measures of how well strategic
goals are being met
 Usage information
 Performance-prediction capabilities
 Relational databases to integrate
individual management systems
 Consideration of qualitative issues
 Links to the budget process
 Engineering and economic
analysis tools
 Useful outputs, effectively presented
 Continuous feedback procedures
U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration Office
of Asset Management, 1999
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Supporting
Software
Facility Asset Management Software
The search for “facility asset management software” returned over 4.8 million results.
Not as many results as “facility asset management”, but quite large.
This is where it gets confusing…..and perhaps on purpose.
Facility Condition Assessment Software
Over 5.1 million results…..and the first entry is not specifically a Facility
Condition Assessment product.
Facilities Condition Assessment Software
Over 5.8 million results
“So Many Choices. So Little Time”
Asset Lifecycle Model
for Total Cost of Ownership
A Framework for Facilities Lifecycle Management, APPA, FFC, Holder, IFMA, NASFA
Building
Information
Management
Framework
(BIMF)
IWMS
Real Estate &
Lease
Management
Project
Management
Facilities &
Space
Management
Integrated Work
Management System
Maintenance
Management
Sustainability &
Energy
Management
REPM
IPD
CAFM
EAM
EHS
ELMS
JOC
CAD
CMMS
BMP
BIM
EPP
CPMS
EMS
5 Components of IWMS
Real Estate and Lease Management
(examples AppFolio, Buildium, Property Matrix, ProLease)
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Lease Analysis, Administration and Accounting
Site Selection & Site Management
Strategic Planning
RFP Analysis
Portfolio Management
Transaction Management
Tax Management
Broker Transaction Management
5 Components of IWMS
(Capital) Project Management
(examples Microsoft Project, Primavera, Prolog, Eclipse)
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Capital Planning
Funding
Design (new facilities, expansions, remodeling)
Bidding
Procurement
Cost and Resource Management
Project Documentation and Drawing Management
Scheduling
Critical Path Analysis
5 Components of IWMS
Facilities and Space Management
The International Facility Management Association (IFMA) defines
facility management as the “practice of coordinating the physical
workplace with the people and work of the organization.”
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CAFM
CAD
BIM
CPMS
5 Components of IWMS
Computerized Maintenance Management System
(examples: MAXIMO, MicroMain, Datastream 7i)
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Asset Management
Work Requests and Work Order Administration
Preventative Maintenance
Unscheduled Maintenance
Warranty Compliance and Administration
Maintenance Scheduling
Inventory Management and Purchasing
Vendor Management
Facility Condition Monitoring
5 Components of IWMS
Sustainability and Energy Management Systems
(examples: EnergyCAP, INTELEX, e3EIM, Sustainability Cloud)
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Energy Consumption
Water Consumption
Waste Production
GHG Emissions
Sustainability Performance Metrics
Energy Benchmarking
BMS Integration
Carbon Emissions Tracking
Energy Efficiency Project Analysis
The 6th Component of IWMS
Environmental Sustainability and Compliance
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Energy Efficiency
Waste Management
Nonrenewable Minerals Consumption
Renewable Groundwater Supplies
Pollution Absorption
Recycling
Carbon Credit Calculation
Certification
Employee At-Home Working Facilitation
FOCUS
AND
Space Management
TOOLS
Facility and Space Management Tools
Computer Aided Facilities Management (CAFM)
(examples: Archibus, Aperture Technologies, FM Systems)
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Asset Management
Space Management
Room Booking
Move Management
Strategic Planning
Telecommunications Cable Management
Physical Security Administration
CAD and BIM Integration
Facility and Space Management Tools
CAD (Computer Aided Design)
(examples: AutoCAD, Microstation, InfraWorks 360, TurboCAD)
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Building Design
Infrastructure Design
Plant Design
Product Design
2D and 3D Modeling
Simulation
Rendering
Facility and Space Management Tools
BIM (Building Information Modeling)
(examples: Autodesk Revit, ArchiCAD, Archibus EIM)
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Digital representation of physical and functional
characteristics of a facility
Building design extended beyond 3D
Integrates Time as the 4th dimension
Integrates Costs as the 5th dimension
Combination of “objects” that include their geometry,
relations and attributes
Facility and Space Management Tools
CPMS (Capital Planning and Management Systems)
(examples: xpparagon, BUILDER)
 Systematic management process to plan and budget for known cyclic repair
and replacement requirements that extend the life and retain the usable
condition of facilities and systems.
 Often called Capital Renewal.
 Planned investment program that ensures that facilities will function at levels
commensurate with the priorities and missions of an organization.
 Included are major building and infrastructure systems and components that
have a maintenance cycle in excess of one year.
Major Functions of a CPMS
of a
CPMS
The Facilities Dichotomy
 Facility assets are reported to equal 25 to 40 percent of the value of any private sector
business or public sector institution.
 Typically tracked as an asset on the balance sheet
but
 Until recently, less than 10% of these businesses and institutions “managed” these assets
as they would other business assets, such as labor, equipment, or production processes.
 Typically tracked as a cost item on the income statement
 Capital and expense budgets often managed by different groups and funding decisions
made independent of each other
Harvard University Study
The Opportunities
 The next “low hanging fruit” that provides business an opportunity to
reduce costs, and thus increase shareholder value, is Facility Asset
Management.
 Over the past few years, there is an increased awareness of the
financial value of establishing and maintaining fact-based,
standardized facilities asset management programs.
 With this awareness, we have seen an increased focus from providers
of facility condition assessment services, facilities consulting, and
computerized maintenance management and asset management
software programs.
The Opportunities
If you……
 Manage facilities like you manage your business, and
 Convert facilities into financial terms
You will…..
 Improve the condition of the assets, and
 Reduce overall cost of facility ownership
How to Improve FAM?
“Recommended Strategies to improve asset management:
 Establish uniform condition assessment criteria
 Standardize criteria for inventory of property assets
 Use of computerized inventory and cost databases
 Standardize costing methods using a common metric
 Adoption of a comprehensive, valid, engineering based assessment system
that incorporates life-cycle planning into facilities maintenance”
Government Accounting Office, Sept. 1999
6 “Whats” of Asset Management
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What do you own?
What is it worth?
What is the deferred maintenance?
What is its condition?
What is the remaining service life?
What do you fix first?
Why Industry Needs Asset Management Tools, Dr. D.J. Vanier, National Research Council Canada, 1999
Facility Metrics
....”annual budgets for maintenance and repair should be
set at 2% to 4% of the current replacement value (CRV) of
the constructed facilities…”
Federal Facilities Council, 1996
Example M&R Cost Analysis
Facility Type
Office Building, 2-4 stories
Retail Store
Factory, 1 story
Area (SF)
Cost/SF
1,000,000 $
146.00
1,000,000 $
126.19
1,000,000 $
114.55
3,000,000
$
$
$
$
CRV
146,000,000
126,190,000
114,550,000
386,740,000
$
Costs
11,602,200
Rate
Annual M&R Spending
Cost/SF
Average Lifespan (yrs)
Lifespan M&R Costs
Total Costs over Lifespan
$
3.0%
3.87
55
$ 638,121,000
$ 1,024,861,000
Avg Life (yrs)
58
50
58
55
FAM Costs
1st Year FCA Costs
Software (initial cost + 1 years maint)
Assessments (Initial Assessment @10¢/SF)
5 Year FCA Costs
Software (initial cost + 5 years maint)
Assessments (2 times over 5 years)
10 Year FCA Costs
Software (initial cost + 10 years maint)
Assessments (3 times over 10 years)
$
$
$
Cost
Cost/Year
Cost/SF/Year
37,500 $
37,500 $
0.013
300,000 $
300,000 $
0.100
337,500 $
337,500 $
0.113
% of Annual M&R
0.32%
2.59%
2.91%
$
$
$
Cost/SF/Year
Cost
Cost/Year
0.005
67,500 $
13,500 $
600,000 $
120,000 $
0.040
667,500 $
133,500 $
0.045
% of Annual M&R
0.12%
1.03%
1.15%
$
$
$
Cost
Cost/Year
Cost/SF/Year
105,000 $
10,500 $
0.004
900,000 $
90,000 $
0.030
1,005,000 $
100,500 $
0.034
% of Annual M&R
0.09%
0.78%
0.87%
Return on Investment
If you could extend the life of your portfolio only one year over
a ten year period……….
 You would save $11.6 mil in M&R costs = Benefit
 Cost total $1.0 mil over 10 years for FAM program = Cost
Return on Investment (10 years) = 1,054%
Return on Investment (55 Year Life) = 187%
FAM at No Cost
With the knowledge gained from a FAM Program,
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On a 3 MSF portfolio,
do you think you could maintain these facilities at the same level of service,
spending $3.83/SF vs $3.87/SF on M&R
over the next ten years?
 Yes?
Then you implemented your FAM Program at no cost!
Questions? Comments?
Thank you for joining this presentation,
A Primer on Facility Asset Management
By Bill
Faesenmeier
william.faesenmeier@xpsolutions.com
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