Condition monitoring
Maintenance Contracts, A guide to best practice for procurement (BG 66/2016), written by Karl Godfrey and Martijn Groen and published by BSRIA in November 2016, states: ‘condition monitoring is widely used in the process industry and has been for many years, but there has been a slow migration of these techniques into building services maintenance. Condition monitoring provides a means of improving the conventional maintenance regime by evaluating indicative parameters of plant condition such as temperature, vibration, oil condition and power quality. This is known as condition-based maintenance (CBM).’
--BSRIA
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- BSRIA articles.
- BSRIA definitions.
- BSRIA.
- Design for maintenance.
- In-house or outsource maintenance.
- Maintenance and operational strategy.
- Maintenance.
- Planned preventive maintenance.
- Predictive maintenance.
- Proactive maintenance.
- Reliability centred maintenance.
- Scheduled maintenance.
- Unplanned maintenance.
Featured articles
Check out some of the best features and news from Designing Buildings as well as key stories from around the web.
New, more proportionate and targeted approach for higher-risk building assessments.
Government brings British Steel into public ownership.
UKCW Birmingham returns with bold new theme and focus.
New guidance published on competence requirements for self-certification schemes.
Construction Management, 8 July
NEETs crisis drives interest in trades, but apprenticeships barriers remain.
Passive fire protection webinar
MEP services penetration seals.
Where its at podcast (and video) - The role of the Architectural Technologist as an Expert Witness.
More than 200 remarkable buildings added to SAVE’s Buildings at Risk register.
Government scraps pre-application consultation for Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects.
Historic England and infrastructure
New projects offer opportunities for the historic environment and local communities.
Construction Management, 2 July
Construction deaths halve in two years.
Green Book changes to drive investment in all parts of UK.

















