Learning Legacy
APM’s Learning Legacy shares knowledge and lessons learned from some of the UK’s high profile projects.
Previously, APM worked with the Olympic Delivery Authority to document good practice examples and innovations from the construction of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
More recently, it has been an official project management learning legacy partner for Crossrail, one of Europe’s largest construction project. Over time this constantly evolving resource will contribute and provide ever greater depth of resource for the benefit of the project profession.
Crossrail
As an official learning legacy partner, APM is sharing knowledge and lessons from one of the most complex infrastructure projects in Europe, Crossrail.
Crossrail Project 2019-2023: Completing the Elizabeth Line, published by APM, includes six papers on leadership, recovery, sponsorship, integration, cost control and final operation.
You can download the journal here.
APM also shared lessons from Crossrail in a series of webinars published in 2017. View the videos here.
Topics include:
- Project lifecycle and stakeholder engagement
- Performance and commercial assurance
- Risk management
- Project controls
More information can be found on the Crossrail Learning Legacy website
How HS2 is helping embed the learning legacy as an industry standard approach
Learning legacy is a structured approach to the capture and dissemination of lessons, good practice and innovation from major projects, aimed at raising the bar in industry.
Ten years after London 2012 launched the industry’s first learning legacy to much acclaim, and building on the subsequent learning legacies of Crossrail and Thameslink London Bridge, HS2 has taken the metaphorical baton and launched its own learning legacy... read more.
London 2012 Olympics Games
As an official partner APM shared the knowledge and lessons learned from one of the most successful British construction projects of our time - delivered on time and on budget by the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA).
Along with APM, the ODA worked closely with contractors, industry partners, government bodies and academia to capture the lessons learned and document best practice examples and innovations for the benefit of the profession and to raise the bar within the construction sector.
To aid in sharing best practice APM shared the lessons learned from the construction of the London 2012 Olympic Games through a series of events in 2012:
Lessons learned on the construction of the Olympic Park, January 2012. This first event described the overall task of the ODA; the role of the Delivery Partner CLM; the principal challenges faced to deliver the venues and infrastructure; and the results that have been achieved.
Context, governance and setting up the programme, February 2012. The second of APMs learning legacy events focussed on establishing the programme governance, the appointment of CLM as the delivery partner and the procurement challenge.
Delivering the Olympic Park, March 2012. This event focused on how to contract for and manage a programme of the size and complexity of the Olympic Park.
Providing assurance to the London 2012 ODA construction programme, April 2012. This event discussed the programme assurance framework; how risk was identified and managed; how progress was monitored and reported; and how quality assurance was provided across the programme.
Delivering the Olympics legacy through the construction programme, May 2012. This final learning legacy event covered how the ODA defined its priority themes across the programme, and focused on sustainability to demonstrate how the strategic objectives of the themes were delivered through the construction programme.
Bonus event: How the BBC successfully produced and broadcast the Olympics. Following on from the hugely successful Learning Legacy event series, the APM London branch invited the BBC to share how they delivered the multi-platform coverage of the London 2012 Olympic Games.
View the videos from the events here
More information can be found on the Olympic Delivery Authority’s Learning Legacy website