A quality manager must ensure that construction materials undergo appropriate levels and methods
of inspection based on their importance to the project and budget constraints. This is supported by
best practices in construction quality management, which emphasize a risk-based approach to
inspection.
Inspection Based on Material Criticality:
High-risk materials (e.g., structural steel, load-bearing concrete) require strict testing.
Low-risk materials (e.g., finishing elements, non-load-bearing components) can have reduced
inspection levels.
Methods of Inspection:
Non-Destructive Testing (NDT): Used for materials critical to structural integrity.
Visual Inspections: Applied where lower risk is identified.
Third-Party Testing: Used for high-criticality elements to ensure compliance.
Budget Considerations:
High-priority materials receive more rigorous testing within budgetary limits.
Inspection costs are weighed against potential failure costs.
Quality assurance plans include risk-adjusted resource allocation.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
Option A (Most Rigorous for All Materials): Not feasible due to budget constraints.
Option C (Least Expensive Methods): Risks quality failures and non-compliance.
Option D (Third-Party Inspections for All): Adds unnecessary costs for low-risk materials.
ASQ Construction Quality Management (CQM) Reference:
Quality Management in Construction Projects (Inspection and Testing Methods).
QA Library (Material Inspection and Testing).