You already know that catching design mistakes early saves money. But here is the dirty secret that nobody tells you. Most constructability reviews are rushed, incomplete, and practically useless. Someone spends two days flipping through a thousand pages of drawings, marks up a few obvious conflicts, and calls it done. Meanwhile, the real disasters are still hiding in the overlaps between disciplines.
So what does a proper review actually look like? There is a solid breakdown of best practices at https://www.fields-builds.com/blog/constructability-review-best-practices Let me pull out the most important bits that actually make a difference on site.
First, start early. Not when the drawings are already finished and ready for permit. Start during design development when changes are still cheap and easy. Iterative reviews as the design evolves catch problems before they become baked into every page of the set.
Second, do not split the review by discipline. This is where most teams mess up. They have one person check the architectural drawings, another check structural, another check MEP. But guess where most issues live? Right at the boundaries between those sets. Does the ductwork actually fit through the opening the architect showed? Does the steel column line up with the wall or is it floating in the middle of a hallway? A good reviewer looks at how everything fits together, not just each piece in isolation.
Third, use a checklist. Not because you need to tick boxes, but because a systematic approach ensures you do not miss entire categories of problems. The checklist should cover things like drawing indexes matching, life safety ratings being consistent across floor plans, and points of connection aligning between civil and MEP drawings.
Fourth, bring in a third party reviewer who actually has construction experience. Not an architect who has never worn a hard hat. Not an engineer who has not visited a job site in ten years. Someone who has built things and knows what questions to ask because they have seen it go wrong before.
Fifth, do not just hand over a five hundred page mark up and walk away. Distill the results. Give the team a high level summary that tells them where the biggest risks are and where to focus their limited time and money. A list of every minor inconsistency is not helpful. A clear roadmap of what will actually hurt you if not fixed is gold.
And finally, do not forget the specifications and reports. Most reviews only look at the drawings. But the specifications might say one thing while the drawings show another. The basis of design might describe a completely different system than what is detailed on the pages. A good review catches those mismatches too.
Bottom line? A proper constructability review is not a box checking exercise. It is a strategic tool that saves millions when done right. But done poorly, it is just wasted time. Follow the best practices, bring in the right people, and do it early. Your budget and your schedule will thank you.