DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CIVIL SITE ENGINEER AND SITE SUPERVISOR
SITE
SUPERVISOR:
1. Oversee operations on
a day-to-day basis.
2. Study the drawings and execute the work by managing the
labour, material, and machinery as per daily planning.
2. Ensure that work is
done safely, on time and within budget and to the right quality standards.
3. The responsibility of
supervising the whole site.
4. Before work starts, a
site manager gets things ready by taking on staff, and preparing the site,
carefully planning the work to be done and installing temporary offices for site
staff.
5. Monitor progress,
oversee the delivery of materials and carry out safety checks and sort out any
problems which could hold up work as they arise.
6. Supervising the
labours at every stage of the construction.
7. Monitoring the work and providing the current status of work
to concerned Site Engineer.
8. Keep in close contact
with members of their site team at all times, and liaise with architects,
engineers, surveyors, and planners.
SITE
ENGINEER:
The role of construction
site engineer depends on the type of work involved and experience of site
engineer in a construction project. The duties and responsibilities of a
construction site engineer are as follows, many of these will be delegated to
other engineers on the site according to their experience and ability:
1. Setting out the works
in accordance with the drawings and specification.
2. Liaising with the
project planning engineer regarding construction programs.
3. Calculating quantity
of materials.
4. Checking materials and
work in progress for compliance with the specified requirements.
5. Observance of safety
requirements.
6.. Resolving technical
issues with employer’s representatives, suppliers, subcontractors and statutory
authorities.
7. Quality control in
accordance with CSIs/procedures method statements, quality plans and inspection
and test plans, all prepared by the project management team and by
subcontractors.
8. Liaising with company
or project purchasing department to ensure that purchase orders adequately
define the specified requirements.
9. Measurement and
valuation (in collaboration with the project quantity surveyor where
appropriate).
10. Providing data in
respect of variation orders and site instructions.
11. Preparing record
drawings, technical reports, site diary, daily progress
report, monthly progress report, subcontractor bills etc.
12. Tracking up the material wastage.
13. Supervising and counselling
junior or trainee engineers.
14. Job review of
subordinate staff.
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