**10 Signs Your Building Project Is Going Off Track (And How to Fix
It)**
Target Keyword: building project delays Melbourne · 360/mo
Building projects rarely fail overnight. They go off the rails gradually
— through a series of small warning signs that, ignored or
misunderstood, accumulate into a crisis. Here are the ten warning signs
we’ve learned to watch for in 28 years of project management — and
what to do if you spot them.
A builder who submits progress claims early, or claims amounts above the
contractual milestones, is often managing cashflow difficulties or
over-claiming. Review every progress claim against the actual work
completed before authorising payment. Overpayments are almost impossible
to recover if the builder encounters financial difficulty.
Sign 2: Increasing Number of Variations
A small number of variations is normal. A large and growing number of
variations — particularly for items that should have been in the
original contract — suggests the builder tendered at an
unrealistically low price and is recovering margin through the variation
process. Review each variation carefully against the contract
documentation.
Sign 3: Trades Disappearing From Site
If your site is regularly empty, or trades stop appearing without
explanation, the builder may be diverting labour to other projects or
experiencing subcontractor payment disputes. A healthy project has
continuous activity on site through the construction phase.
Sign 4: Programme Slipping
If programme milestones are consistently being missed — even by small
amounts — the cumulative effect will be significant. A builder who is
2 weeks behind on each of the first 5 milestones is likely to finish
4–6 months late. Address programme slippage early and formally, in
writing.
Sign 5: Requests for Information (RFIs) Ignored or Delayed
Builders use RFIs to seek clarification on the design. A high volume of
RFIs is a sign of documentation quality issues. RFIs that go unanswered
by the design team are a sign of poor project management. Either way,
unanswered RFIs slow construction and give the builder legitimate
grounds for delay and variation claims.
Signs 6–10
Sign 6: Subcontractors telling you about payment issues — contractors
talk to owners when the head contractor isn’t paying them. Sign 7:
Quality of work declining mid-project — often a sign of financial
pressure and corner-cutting. Sign 8: Builder becoming less communicative
— hard to reach, slow to respond, avoiding site meetings. Sign 9:
Unexplained material substitutions — different products to those
specified being installed without formal variation approval. Sign 10:
Work failing inspections — building surveyor raising non-compliance
issues that the builder is slow to rectify.
What to Do If You See These Signs
First, document everything — all communications in writing, all
progress claims reviewed and annotated. Second, obtain professional
advice from an architect or construction lawyer before the situation
escalates further. Third, consider engaging Integral Design Solutions as
a project manager or project advocate if you are not already using one.
We have substantial experience in taking over struggling projects and
bringing them back on track.
Ready to Get Started? Contact Integral Design Solutions today for
expert construction project management and dispute resolution services
in Melbourne and Victoria. Visit integraldesignsolutions.com.au/ or
call us to book a free consultation.

