Construction quality charter
The Construction Quality Charter refers to the Construction Quality Improvement Collaborative (CQIC) initiative launched as part of the joint public and construction sector CQIC collaboration and is designed to support the Scottish Construction Accord. The CQIC Construction Quality Charter focusses on five key ambitions and four key drivers and associated commitments to help to deliver a sustainable quality culture. These are outlined below and a pdf of the full charter which can be downloaded here.
The five key values of the CQIC charter are:
- Ambition. Developing a sector that believes in continuous improvement, is willing to change and is ambitious for the industry
- Collaboration. Working together to share knowledge, lessons learned and best practice
- Commitment. Taking pride in what we do, always doing our best, aiming for customer satisfaction and taking ownership and accountability when we get it wrong.
- Openness. Building an industry that is recognised for its honesty and integrity.
- Respect. Working across the industry to build professionalism, leadership, trust and self-respect.
The four key drivers and and associated commitments of the CQIC charter are:
- Quality control and assurance. Doing it right first time – at the right time.
Associated commitments: Processes in place to ensure compliance and to prevent errors. Mechanisms are in place to detect and address any variations to agreed standards. Appropriate project resources are available for budget, programme, design, materials and skills
- Behaviour. Creating the conditions that embed a “right first time” culture.
Associated commitments: Leadership demonstrate a commitment to delivering the CQIC vision and values at all times. All personnel are engaged and committed to creating a positive working environment with the right conditions for realising change.
- Alignment. All parts of the process are designed and implemented to drive quality, improve performance and deliver compliance.
Associated commitments: Leadership support initiatives that are designed to align policy and guidance across the sector. Project delivery systems, including procurement, are aligned to drive quality. Everyone has access to the right information at the right time.
- Competence. Roles & Responsibilities. Ensuring that everyone is clear about their roles and responsibilities and is competent to deliver them.
Associated commitments: Appropriate project leadership and management is in place. Culture encourages everyone to accept responsibility for delivering quality, Everyone has the right skills, experience, and qualifications to do a quality job. We are all committed to developing people.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- CIAT adds support to the Scottish Construction Quality Charter.
- CIOB supports Scottish charter on construction quality.
- Construction site inspection.
- Construction quality.
- Construction Quality Improvement Collaborative.
- Construction Leadership Forum.
- Cost of quality.
- Design quality for buildings.
- How to write an inspection and test plan
- Inspection and test plan
- ISO 9001.
- Project quality plan.
- Quality assurance.
- Quality control.
- Quality culture and behaviours.
- Quality in construction projects.
- Quality management system.
- Quality.
- RIBA Plan of Work 2020.
- RIBA.
- Scottish Construction Accord.
- The CLF Transformation Action Plan.
- Tolerances.
- Total quality management in construction.
- Workmanship.
Featured articles and news
Tackle the decline in Welsh electrical apprenticeships
ECA calls on political parties 100 days to the Senedd elections.
Resident engagement as the key to successful retrofits
Retrofit is about people, not just buildings, from early starts to beyond handover.
What they are, how they work and why they are popular in many countries.
Plastic, recycling and its symbol
Student competition winning, M.C.Esher inspired Möbius strip design symbolising continuity within a finite entity.
Do you take the lead in a circular construction economy?
Help us develop and expand this wiki as a resource for academia and industry alike.
Warm Homes Plan Workforce Taskforce
Risks of undermining UK’s energy transition due to lack of electrotechnical industry representation, says ECA.
Cost Optimal Domestic Electrification CODE
Modelling retrofits only on costs that directly impact the consumer: upfront cost of equipment, energy costs and maintenance costs.
The Warm Homes Plan details released
What's new and what is not, with industry reactions.
Could AI and VR cause an increase the value of heritage?
The Orange book: 2026 Amendment 4 to BS 7671:2018
ECA welcomes IET and BSI content sign off.
How neural technologies could transform the design future
Enhancing legacy parametric engines, offering novel ways to explore solutions and generate geometry.
Key AI related terms to be aware of
With explanations from the UK government and other bodies.
From QS to further education teacher
Applying real world skills with the next generation.
A guide on how children can use LEGO to mirror real engineering processes.
Data infrastructure for next-generation materials science
Research Data Express to automate data processing and create AI-ready datasets for materials research.
Wired for the Future with ECA; powering skills and progress
ECA South Wales Business Day 2025, a day to remember.
AI for the conservation professional
A level of sophistication previously reserved for science fiction.






















