@litro,
In any civilised society, laws are developed to ensure there is order in the construction industry. Arch, qs and eng are the main ensurers of consumer protection.
@mukiri,
@pennystocker has not publicly solicited people to offer them construction consultancy services as TMC has done.
Consultations are important to avoid risk to general public eg buildings collapse, cracking, over/under budget/unnecessary litigation.
We all see buildings collapse.
I usually get clients asking me to resolve issues where they purchase houses then serious cracks appear.etc etc
@tom boy,
This is the advice that am already giving. Remember its your money so you can still risk it and go ahead. There is a reason all civilized society regulates construction by saying only an arch/eng/qs can give quality assurance and not TMC.
In TMC website, i see no mention of any arch/eng/qs. Its complete breaking of construction law as spelt out in Kenya and the rest of the world. This law is meant to protect you the consumer.
@tokyo.
There are laws to be followed for any company to employ registered professionals to give service to the public. For example, the company must give full disclosure to BORAQS, AAK eg Kenya Airport Authority, Kenya Railways etc but not companies in the size of TMC.
For example, can @tokyo wake up one day and employ a registered architect then start to solicit for business? No.
There are laws to govern such a process.
There are certain issues regarding professional responsibility etc to be followed.
You can still use TMC since eventually its your money at risk but legally speaking TMC will have broken the law by misrepresenting you into procuring illegal services.
@Tito44.
Well said. I have absolutely no interest at all and my clientele is not same as TMC.
Sometimes its good to stand by what is right no matter how unpopular it is.
My concern is that TMC can easily get away with sugar coating info to unsuspecting Kenyans and not only get away with it, but still get support from the same people and still charge them even higher.
@tom boy.
Maybe am poor in getting my point across but sooner or later you will realise what am saying. The people who put up construction laws in Kenya and the rest of the civilised world could not have been wrong.
It feels like the advice a parent gives to a truant teen who thinks that discos and drugs are important. It requires alot of patience for the parent till the day the teen will mature and see the importance of the advice.
Let me be very clear again.The low/middle class individual home owner clientele is less than 10% of average architect customers so its not about competition with TMC who is targeting this market.
There is only one way to reduce cost of construction in Kenya/world, through research/knowledge/skill in construction methodology.
Arch/eng/qs have no monopoly over this but due to their work, tend to accumulate such info which helps reduce costs.
TMC is not using any such info to reduce costs. In fact, their costs are higher than normal, at 27 to 28k per m2.
If there were no laws to regulate this, i would have no beef with them since its a willing buyer willing seller market.
In the thinking that someone is saving, they are actually spending more .27 to 28k per m2 is not a small amount .
I have supervised constructions with costs as low as between kes 15 to kes 20k per m2 within the last 1 year for low/middle class finishes.
Looks like Kenya is quite lenient in enforcing laws since in developed countries, the law would have been implemented to the letter.
I cant employ a doctor then ask the doctor to give services to the public as a business model eg Buruburu doc.
As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.