planning structures the project into deliverable stages. The service aims for each phase to be operationally coherent, commercially viable and compatible with later phases.
establishes the structure of the development programme in broad phases. The strategy balances demand, infrastructure availability, site logistics and financial objectives.
focus on the minimum work needed to prepare the site for multiple phases. This can include site clearance, utilities, access, ground improvement and shared infrastructure.
planning tracks where phases share structures, utilities, access or public spaces. The intention is to avoid operational dead-ends and awkward handovers.
address how incomplete environments are used between phases. The focus is on safe access, presentable frontages and workable arrangements for early tenants or services.
looks at the timing of capital outlay and income relative to the phasing plan. The aim is to avoid funding gaps and phases that cannot stand on their own commercially.
addresses planning, environmental and technical approvals across phases. Poor sequencing can lock in sub-optimal layouts or create delays later.
considers how later phases, upgrades or end-of-life works are accommodated in the original master plan. The goal is to avoid trapped assets and impossible work sites.