What Makes a Good Project Pack?
Façade Field Notes
Short version
What Makes a Good Project Pack?
A good project pack saves time before anyone reaches site.
A strong enquiry does not need to be pretty. It needs to be useful. Drawings, scope, photos, access notes and programme expectations tell us whether the package is a good fit and what needs clarifying.
The fastest way to slow a project down is to send almost nothing and ask for a number by tomorrow. We have all seen that film. The ending is rarely premium.



The information that actually helps
For pricing or first review, the useful material is simple. It does not need a novel. It needs enough detail to understand the work, the access and the risk around the edges.
- Current drawings and specification
- Scope of works and approximate quantities
- Site location and project stage
- Access method: scaffold, MEWP, tower, crane or mixed
- Photos of existing conditions and interfaces
- Programme expectation and any known constraints
Why PMs and QS teams benefit
Good information makes the conversation sharper. The PM gets fewer vague replies. The QS gets fewer assumptions. The site team gets fewer surprises when the first operative turns up and asks why the drawing does not match the opening.
Sometimes the best outcome of a first review is not a price. It is one clean question that stops the package drifting in the wrong direction.
Materials and responsibility
Cladders.co.uk normally works as an installation contractor. Materials are supplied by the main contractor, façade contractor or project team unless something else is expressly agreed in writing.
Clear pack first. Cleaner delivery later.



