This blog post is regarding one of the most commonly-used and often-misunderstood concepts in construction documents: alternates. Alternates are a means for the Owner to defer certain decisions on the scope of the Project until after pricing is obtained from prospective contractors, and to ensure the Project can be constructed with the funds available. An alternate is a defined portion of the Work that is priced separately and thus provides an option for the Owner in determining the final scope of the Project. Alternates provide the Owner with a choice between different products or can define the addition or deletion of a portion of the Work. On design-bid-build projects—the focus of this post—alternates allow the Owner to adjust the extent of the Work, after the Project is bid (but usually before the Contract Documents are executed), based on the alternates bid and the Owner’s priorities. Using alternates successfully with minimal risk to all parties can be quite challenging; many owners, engineers, and architects may not fully appreciate the extent of the risks. Despite this, many owners, engineers, and architects frequently resort to using alternates to obtain pricing for Work or products that the Owner may or may not wish to award. The process of successfully incorporating alternates into Bidding Documents with minimal associated risk often becomes complicated because of Owner or engineer/architect desire to use alternates “for maximum flexibility in awarding the Contract”; what such “flexibility” often engenders, however, is significant risk of a bid protest. Using an excessive number of alternates should be avoided, because it unnecessarily complicates the bidding process. Alternates may be additive or to deductions from the base bid. To simplify the procedure for objectively determining the apparent Successful Bidder (to whom the Contract is awarded), EJCDC recommend that alternates on a Project be either all-additive or all-deductive. It is much more difficult to objectively determine the apparent Successful Bidder on projects with multiple alternate bid items when some alternates are additive and some deductive; such projects will often have increased vulnerability to bid protests. When used, alternates must be coordinated in the following places in the Bidding Documents:
19.03Evaluation of Bids
Note carefully the language of EJCDC ® C-200 (2013), Paragraph 19.03.B, above, as well as Paragraph 14.01 (second) of EJCDC ® C-200 (2013), both of which state that alternates will be considered in the order of priority listed on the Bid Form. This means that the first or “A” alternate is the one most desired by the Owner and that the remaining alternates each have an incrementally lower priority. When written for deductive alternates, the order of priority changes and the first or “A” alternate would be the alternate least-desired by the Owner. The provisions presented above for determining the apparent low Bidder for a base bid with alternates is used by several federal agencies and has been challenged before and upheld by several boards of contract appeals. It represents the fairest method of determining the apparent low Bidder that has been reviewed by EJCDC. When followed precisely—including the Owner’s announcement of the funds available for the Work (usually just prior to the opening of Bids)—any Bidder will have little basis to challenge an award with a claim that the Owner manipulated the order of the Bidders by a post-bid selection of specific alternates or a post-bid determination of the order in which the alternates are selected. The American Institute of Architects (A(A) Document AIA ® A701 TM (1997) covers alternates at Sections 1.6 and 5.3.2. However, because AIA documents are typically used for privately-funded construction where the Owner can award the Contract as the Owner sees fit, the provisions of AIA ® A701 TM on evaluating alternate bid items is very short and essentially allows the Owner to award the Contract at the Owner sees fit. Use of such a provision on a publicly-funded project is likely to increase the potential for a bid protest.
For more on alternates, see the Construction Specifications Institute’s (CSI) Project Delivery Practice Guide (2011), Section 8.14 (“Controlling Variables”) and Chapter 12 (“Procurement”); and CSI’s Construction Specifications Practice Guide (2011), Section 7.7 (“Specifying Alternates”).