Intelligent Risk Identification in Construction Projects: A Case Study of an AI-Based Framework
Abstract
1. Introduction
- Financial risks, encompassing budget overruns due to inaccurate cost estimations, inflation, or unforeseen expenses;
- Safety risks arising from hazardous working conditions, equipment malfunctions, and human error, potentially leading to accidents and injuries;
- Environmental risks stemming from pollution, habitat destruction, and non-compliance with environmental regulations, resulting in ecological damage and legal repercussions;
- Scheduling risks, involving delays caused by poor planning, resource constraints, or external disruptions such as weather conditions, impacting project timelines and overall efficiency;
- Regulatory risks pertaining to changes in building codes, permit approvals, and other legal and compliance-related issues, potentially causing project disruptions and increased costs.
- Expert judgment, relying on the experience and intuition of industry professionals to identify and evaluate potential risks.
- The use of risk registers, which are time-consuming to compile and maintain.
- Probabilistic modeling, employing statistical techniques to quantify the likelihood and impact of various risks.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Collection and Project Selection
2.2. Project Segmentation
- Initiating Phase—covering feasibility studies, initial regulatory approvals, initial assessments, and early planning decisions;
- Planning Phase—covering the development of detailed design documentation, permitting processes (e.g., location and construction permits), stakeholder approvals, and refined cost estimation;
- Executing Phase—covering the main construction activities, including procurement of materials, on-site construction work, workforce management, and quality control measures;
- Closing Phase—covering testing and commissioning of the building, final inspections, compliance verification, permit finalization, and formal project handover to the client/operator.
2.3. Research Design
2.4. Validation
- First, cross-model triangulation was performed by comparing outputs from the three AI models to confirm the consistency of identified risks across systems.
- Second, all identified risks were examined against patterns reported in established construction risk literature to ensure alignment with previously documented findings.
- Third, each risk was internally validated against verifiable evidence in the project’s technical documentation, confirming factual grounding and ensuring that every identified item was directly supported by the project data.
- Fourth, external expert validation was conducted. A targeted search identified three experts with substantial experience in construction risk management, representing academia and industry, and covering local (Croatia), European (Germany), and global (United States) perspectives. After selection, a 30-item questionnaire was administered (see Supplementary Material S5). Each participant received the publicly available technical specification document (identical to that used in the AI analysis), a summary document providing a condensed overview, along with a link to the questionnaire. The questionnaire itself utilized a mixed format of multiple-selection rating scales (e.g., star ratings), multiple-choice questions and open-ended text boxes for qualitative feedback. The expert responses were assessed through cross-comparison between respondents, alignment of their feedback with the comparative table of model-specific output characteristics developed in this study, and, where applicable, verification against evidence reported in the existing construction risk management literature. All documents were provided in both Croatian and English to ensure clarity, and the collected responses were analyzed to evaluate the accuracy and plausibility of the AI-identified risks.
3. Results
“You will be acting as a risk management analyst for a public-sector judicial infrastructure project. I have provided you with a technical specification document (in Croatian) for the project: “Construction of the southern building and underground garage on Trg pravde.”Your task is to thoroughly read and analyze the provided project document. While the document is in Croatian, you are to process and understand its content in English.Crucially, please be aware that in our future interactions, we will be extracting specific data from the project document to perform various risk management tasks. Therefore, your understanding of the document’s details is essential.”
3.1. Initiating Phase
“Please structure a Risk Identification Table. I want it to be focused on the Initiating Phase (Pre-construction) of the public-sector judicial infrastructure project provided:‘Construction of the southern building and underground garage on Trg Pravde’.The table should have 7 columns: Code, Risk Source, Cause/Driver, Risk (delivery, event, occurrence), Affected Area, Risk Category, and Risk Bearer.
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Keep in mind the important documentation present in this phase: Pre-Investment study, Feasibility study, Conceptual solution, Environmental study…- -
Consider the following stakeholders for this phase: Investor, Government, Designer, Project Manager, Regulatory bodies…”
- GPT-5 produced a concise and well-balanced risk list covering regulatory, environmental, geotechnical, and stakeholder-related risks. Its output emphasized breadth and alignment with standard risk register practice, identifying foundational risks such as unclear functional requirements, early-stage design quality issues, funding uncertainty, permitting delays, and stakeholder misalignment.
- Gemini 2.5 Pro provided a narrative-style explanation addressing risks connected to project viability, EU NPOO funding conditions, and constraints arising from the project’s historical context. The output included risks related to phased construction assumptions, operational continuity of judicial facilities, transformer station relocation, and regulatory feasibility within a protected urban environment.
- Claude Sonnet 4.5 generated the most detailed and granular output, producing an extensive set of initiating-phase risks with explicit contextual explanations, numerical references, and policy-level implications. Its analysis strongly emphasized financial feasibility, cost estimation uncertainty, and EU funding conditionality.
3.2. Planning Phase
“Please structure a Risk Identification Table. I want it to be focused on the Planning Phase (Pre-construction) of the public-sector judicial infrastructure project provided—‘Construction of the southern building and underground garage on Trg Pravde’.The table should have 7 columns: Code, Risk Source, Cause/Driver, Risk (delivery, event, occurrence), Affected Area, Risk Category, and Risk Bearer.
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Keep in mind the important documentation present in this phase: Location permit, Design documentation, Master (Main) design…- -
Consider the following stakeholders for this phase: Investor, Government, Designer, Project Manager, Regulatory bodies…”
- GPT-5 generated a structured explanation focusing on risks related to design documentation completeness, permitting procedures, late requirement changes, interdisciplinary coordination, regulatory changes, geotechnical integration, and stakeholder involvement. The output addressed risks affecting project readiness, schedule reliability, and technical completeness prior to procurement and construction.
- Gemini 2.5 Pro provided a detailed narrative explanation structured around regulatory, schedule, technical, and stakeholder-related risks. The output addressed risks associated with regulatory non-compliance of the Main Design, utility approval processes, procurement delays linked to fixed EU NPOO deadlines, alternative design options triggering redesign, BIM coordination failures, new geotechnical findings, and operational constraints related to uninterrupted judicial activities.
- Claude Sonnet 4.5 produced an extensive explanation emphasizing design development risks, BIM coordination challenges, adaptation of legacy architectural concepts to current regulatory requirements, structural assumptions related to phased construction, and compliance with nZEB energy performance criteria. The output addressed technical, regulatory, and performance-related risks that may propagate into later project phases if not resolved during planning.
3.3. Executing Phase
“Please structure a Risk Identification Table. I want it to be focused on the Executing Phase (Construction Phase) of the public-sector judicial infrastructure project provided—‘Construction of the southern building and underground garage on Trg Pravde’.The table should have 7 columns: Code, Risk Source, Cause/Driver, Risk (delivery, event, occurrence), Affected Area, Risk Category, and Risk Bearer.
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Consider the following stakeholders for this phase: Investor, Government, General Contractor, and Site Engineer…”
- GPT-5 generated a structured explanation addressing operational, financial, regulatory, and environmental risks associated with on-site execution. The output covered issues related to labor and subcontractor availability, site supervision and quality control, cash flow and payment delays, unforeseen site and ground conditions, regulatory and safety compliance, construction planning and sequencing, and environmental disruptions affecting excavation and structural works.
- Gemini 2.5 Pro provided a detailed explanation focused on execution stage constraints linked to EU NPOO funding requirements and the responsibility of the General Contractor. The output addressed risks related to failure to obtain the Use Permit within the required timeframe, geotechnical and groundwater conditions during deep excavation, critical construction quality defects, and other execution-related compliance and coordination risks.
- Claude Sonnet 4.5 produced an extensive explanation concentrating on geotechnical and site-related risks during construction. The output addressed ground condition variability, groundwater management challenges, excavation pit support performance, and potential settlement impacts on adjacent heritage and operational buildings. These risks were described in relation to construction safety, structural stability, schedule reliability, cost escalation, and third-party impacts.
3.4. Closing Phase
“Please structure me a Risk Identification Table. I want it to be focused on the Closing Phase of the public-sector judicial infrastructure project provided—“Construction of the southern building and underground garage on Trg Pravde”.The table should have 7 columns: Code, Risk Source, Cause/Driver, Risk (delivery, event, occurrence), Affected Area, Risk Category, and Risk Bearer.Focus on the general risk caused by the delay of Occupancy/Usage Permit issuance.
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Consider the following stakeholders for this phase: Investor, Regulatory Body…”
- GPT-5 generated a structured explanation focusing on risks affecting commissioning, handover, and operational readiness. The output addressed issues related to incomplete or non-compliant permit documentation, delays in final technical and safety inspections, unresolved non-conformities and punch list items, administrative delays within permitting authorities, and gaps in digital as-built documentation, including BIM-based Asset Information Models.
- Gemini 2.5 Pro provided a detailed explanation emphasizing regulatory, financial, and contractual risks associated with meeting the fixed EU NPOO deadline for the Use Permit. The output addressed risks related to potential withdrawal of EU funding due to permit delays, regulatory refusal of the Use Permit, prolonged correction and re-inspection cycles, major defects triggering immediate corrective obligations, contractual handover disputes, operational readiness and training deficiencies, and political or administrative interference in the permitting process.
- Claude Sonnet 4.5 produced an extensive explanation concentrating on technical inspection and compliance risks during project closeout. The output addressed risks related to deficiencies in technical inspection documentation, incomplete commissioning of building systems, fire safety compliance failures, and airtightness testing deficiencies affecting nZEB certification. These risks were described in relation to permit approval delays, schedule overruns, cost escalation, and reputational impacts.
3.5. Risk Analysis by Category
“Filter the risks from the existing Initiating, Planning, Executing, and Closing Risk Identification Tables.Create two new tables displaying only risks belonging to the ‘Financial’ or ‘Regulatory’ Risk Categories. So, one table for each category.The table must include the following columns: Code, Risk Source, Cause/Driver, Risk (delivery, event, occurrence), Affected Area, Risk Category, Risk Bearer. Also add an extra column named ‘Phase’ before column ‘Code’ to know which risks belong to what phase.”
“Financial Risks (RCP-03, RCP-17)Financial risks in the Trg Pravde project arise mainly from funding flow uncertainties and cash management challenges:
Delayed public or EU funding approval can stall the initiation of procurement and early works, jeopardizing alignment with the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP) timelines. Interruptions in payment from the investor during construction can trigger claims, slow down on-site activities, or lead to suspension of works, affecting both schedule and contractor relations.These risks highlight the importance of financial planning, timely fund allocation, and robust payment mechanisms to maintain project momentum and prevent contractual disputes.Regulatory Risks (RCP-04, RCP-09, RCP-12, RCP-19, RCP-22)Regulatory risks span the entire project lifecycle and are especially prominent in the Trg Pravde project due to its urban location, protected cultural context, and public-sector oversight:
Permitting delays during concept and design phases (e.g., location/building permits) can push back procurement and construction schedules, especially when cultural heritage or environmental approvals are involved. Regulatory changes during the design phase (such as shifts in procurement or technical standards) may require documentation revisions or even re-tendering, adding administrative burden and timeline risk. On-site inspections or compliance shifts during execution can result in temporary work stoppages, especially if new safety or environmental measures are introduced. Incomplete documentation at closing can delay the issuance of the usage permit, directly impacting handover and operational readiness.These risks underscore the need for early regulatory engagement, continuous legal monitoring, and proactive coordination with authorities to secure timely approvals and ensure compliance throughout.”
3.6. Risk Analysis by Stakeholder Responsibility
“Filter the risks from the existing Initiating, Planning, Executing, and Closing Risk Identification Tables.Create two new tables displaying only risks that are affecting the ‘Investor’ and ‘General Contractor’. So, one table for each stakeholder.The table must include the following columns: Code, Risk Source, Cause/Driver, Risk (delivery, event, occurrence), Affected Area, Risk Category, Risk Bearer. Also add an extra column named ‘Phase’ before column ‘Code’ to know which risks belong to what phase.”
“The stakeholder-based grouping clarifies how the identified risks translate into responsibilities and potential consequences for each project actor.1. InvestorThe risks associated with the Investor are primarily strategic and regulatory in nature. These include unclear project requirements, changes in scope, funding delays, and incomplete or non-compliant documentation. Such risks directly influence the Investor’s ability to secure financing, maintain project momentum, and ensure regulatory approval. When these risks materialize, the effects are typically seen in cost escalation, schedule delays, and reduced alignment with end-user needs, all of which undermine overall project viability. As the party accountable for project initiation, governance, and compliance, the Investor is the logical bearer of these risks.2. General ContractorThe risks linked to the General Contractor arise mainly during the Executing phase and relate to construction performance and operational control. These include shortages of skilled labor, planning inefficiencies, unexpected site conditions, and regulatory inspections during construction. If these risks occur, the consequences are generally delays, rework, cost overruns, and quality deviations, directly affecting the contractor’s contractual obligations and ability to deliver the project as agreed. Because the General Contractor manages on-site execution and resource coordination, these risks naturally fall within their operational responsibility.In summary, the grouping shows a practical alignment between risk type and stakeholder role:
The Investor carries risks tied to strategic decisions and regulatory compliance, The General Contractor carries risks tied to executing efficiency and on-site performance.This distribution reflects typical accountability structures in construction project management and reinforces that the AI-generated grouping is consistent with industry practice.”
3.7. Questionnaire
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. AI-Generated Explanatory Outputs for the Initiating Phase
Appendix A.1. GPT-5
“The Initiating Phase represents the foundational stage of the Trg Pravde project, focused on feasibility assessments, conceptual planning, stakeholder engagement, and early regulatory and environmental evaluations.The risk identification model for this phase highlights several critical exposures that can affect downstream activities:
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Requirement Definition Risks—stemming from insufficiently developed functional needs in early studies (e.g., Pre-Investment or Feasibility Study). If future user needs (courts, academies) are not clearly captured, it could lead to scope misalignment and downstream design changes.- -
Design Quality Risks—associated with incomplete or underdeveloped conceptual solutions. Weak early-stage design increases the risk of rework, especially when integrated with BIM workflows and AIM expectations.- -
Funding and Budget Uncertainty—delays in confirming EU funding or government allocations may postpone procurement, increase opportunity cost, and affect public confidence in project execution.- -
Permitting and Regulatory Delays—a frequent risk in public-sector projects, particularly where location permits and urban planning approvals intersect with protected cultural zones. These can delay project mobilization or lead to scope modifications.- -
Environmental Constraints—including heritage-listed buildings and protected trees within the site boundary. These impose physical and legal limitations on design freedom and may require costly mitigation or redesign if not managed proactively.- -
Geotechnical Uncertainty—related to variable soil and groundwater conditions. If not accurately captured during this phase, it may lead to cost escalations or structural redesigns during execution.- -
Stakeholder Misalignment—insufficient early engagement with judicial institutions or public authorities can result in planning facilities that do not meet operational needs, creating downstream dissatisfaction and operational inefficiencies.Identifying these risks in the Initiating Phase is crucial for setting realistic schedules, securing permits and funding, and aligning all stakeholders. Proactive mitigation such as strengthening requirements gathering, enhancing geotechnical studies, and streamlining permitting pathways helps avoid costly revisions and delays in future phases.”
Appendix A.2. Gemini 2.5 Pro
“The Initiating Phase risks are high-impact exposures originating from the project’s historical context, financing rules, and preliminary design decisions. They threaten to undermine project viability before construction even begins.1. Project Viability & Financial ThreatThis category addresses external factors that could halt the project, which is critical given its public-sector nature and troubled past.
Risk: Hard NPOO Deadline (I-003)
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Explanation: The use of EU NPOO funding imposes a non-negotiable Q2 2026 Use Permit deadline. The core risk is that the sheer scale of the conceptual project (a large building and 49,000 m2 garage) is unachievable within this fixed timeline. Any early-phase delay makes the financial loss of the EU funding almost certain. Risk: Political & Funding Instability (I-001)
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Explanation: The project has a documented history of being stopped and restarted (e.g., failed JPP attempt). This past behavior is a strong indicator that funding or political support could be withdrawn again, nullifying all conceptual and preparatory work.2. Design Integrity & LiabilityThese risks stem from the initial design process and the structural requirements imposed on Phase 1 for future phases.
Risk: Flawed Design Capability (I-002)
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Explanation: The Main Project design, provided by the Client, was procured under a procedure that limited formal vetting of the designer’s BIM/AIM capability. This creates a high risk that the conceptual design is technically deficient for modern BIM workflows and contains errors that will lead to mandatory rework and costly scope disputes. Risk: Phasing Assumptions (I-007)
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Explanation: The concept requires Phase 1 to build the garage with structural anchors for three future, currently un-designed buildings. If the conceptual assumptions about future loads or geometry are incorrect, the flaw is locked into the foundation structure, guaranteeing failure and remedial costs in later phases.3. Site & Regulatory FeasibilityThese risks focus on the constraints imposed by the live site and regulatory environment.
Risk: Heritage Constraints (I-004)
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Explanation: The site is in a protected Cultural-Historical Entity. Regulatory bodies have the power to reject conceptual design or excavation plans that threaten protected status or adjacent buildings, causing major permitting delays. Risk: Geotechnical Uncertainty (I-005)
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Explanation: The large, deep garage design is based on limited preliminary geotechnical data (only nine boreholes). There is a significant risk that actual soil and groundwater conditions are worse, rendering the initial design for the excavation pit protection fundamentally inadequate and forcing a costly redesign before construction can be permitted. Risk: Operational Interface (I-006)Explanation: The concept mandates uninterrupted court operations, yet requires the relocation of two live transformer stations that power these courts. The complex logistical sequence of power migration and demolition presents a high risk of operational failure, directly violating a core project requirement and creating massive liability.”
Appendix A.3. Claude Sonnet 4.5
“FINANCIAL & FUNDING RISKSIP-F-01: EU Recovery and Resilience Facility FundingContext: The project is funded through the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NPOO) 2021-2026, Component C2.5 “Modern Justice Ready for Future Challenges” with a strict Q2 2026 completion deadline.Why it’s critical: EU Recovery Funds have stringent milestone requirements and performance conditions. If the project fails to meet intermediate milestones (location permit by certain date, construction start, progress benchmarks), funding can be suspended or withdrawn. The documentation indicates this is “bespovratna sredstva” (non-repayable grant), but only if conditions are met.Real implications:
The Ministry has limited control over EU policy changes Political changes at EU level could affect disbursement Delay in any phase could trigger milestone failures No funding = project termination at concept stageIP-F-02: Pre-Investment Study Cost EstimationContext: The project involves approximately 71,507 m2 of highly specialized judicial facilities with complex technical requirements (nZEB, BIM, structural glazing, underground garage).Why it’s critical: At concept stage, cost estimations are typically based on benchmarks and preliminary designs. However:
The architectural competition design from 2008 needs adaptation to current standards nZEB requirements add 15–25% to conventional construction costs BIM implementation adds complexity and costs Underground excavation in urban environment is expensive and unpredictable Specialized façade systems (4 types) have limited supplier competitionReal implications:
If the pre-investment study estimated €70M but actual market costs are €90M, the 29% shortfall must be found or scope reduced Government budget approval is required for any increase Budget increases require returning to Parliament—months of delay Insufficient budget = value engineering = compromised design intent(…further explanation excluded for brevity).”
Appendix B. AI-Generated Explanatory Outputs for the Planning Phase
Appendix B.1. GPT-5
“The Planning Phase of the Trg Pravde judicial infrastructure project focuses on obtaining the location and building permits, developing the Main Design documentation, and finalizing technical and legal requirements before procurement and construction begin. The risk identification process for this phase highlights several important challenges that could impact project readiness and timeline:
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Design documentation risks—errors or gaps in the Main Design documentation may lead to rework, incomplete permit applications, or cost escalations during execution. Ensuring high-quality and coordinated design outputs is essential at this stage.- -
Permitting delays—prolonged issuance of location or building permits from regulatory bodies could postpone the construction start date. These risks are particularly relevant due to the heritage-protected nature of the site and its location in a sensitive urban context.- -
Late requirement changes—if the investor introduces changes to project scope or functional needs after design finalization, it may trigger costly redesigns or invalidate parts of the permitting process.- -
Coordination failures—inadequate integration across design disciplines or between documentation packages may result in inconsistencies that only become evident during construction, affecting quality and schedule.- -
Regulatory shifts—changes in public procurement or building codes during the design finalization process could lead to compliance issues or require the project team to revise documentation or restart parts of the permitting process.- -
Geotechnical integration gaps—insufficient incorporation of soil and groundwater conditions into structural and foundation design could lead to unsafe assumptions or unanticipated cost increases.- -
Stakeholder misalignment—limited involvement of end-users such as courts and justice sector institutions could result in facility layouts that don’t meet operational requirements, undermining long-term functionality and satisfaction.
Addressing these risks during the Planning Phase is critical to secure regulatory approvals, ensure technical completeness, and align all key stakeholders. Proactive risk management at this stage supports a smoother transition into procurement and construction, minimizing disruptions and cost escalations later in the project lifecycle.”
Appendix B.2. Gemini 2.5 Pro
“Here is a detailed explanation for each of the identified risks in the Planning (Pre-construction) Phase of the Trg Pravde project, focusing on the completion of the Main Design and the securing of necessary permits.1. Regulatory & Permitting RisksThese risks center on the Investor’s/Designer’s inability to transform the conceptual plan into a compliant, legally approved Main Design.
P-001: Regulatory Non-Compliance in Main Project (Risk Bearer: Investor/Designer)
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Explanation: The Location Permit (a key document in this phase) requires final approval of the Main Project by multiple regulatory and utility bodies (e.g., City Planning, Cultural Heritage, HEP/Gas). This risk captures the event where upon final submission, a regulator identifies a major non-compliance or technical oversight in the completed design. For instance, the excavation plan may be deemed insufficient for the protected heritage buildings, or the utility relocation plan may be rejected, necessitating a costly, time-consuming major design revision that stalls the entire permitting process. P-007: Utility Approval Failure (TS Relocation) (Risk Bearer: Investor/Designer)
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Explanation: The Main Design must finalize the technical solution for the complex relocation of the two live transformer stations (TS). The risk is that the Designer makes assumptions about the utility provider’s (HEP-ODS) requirements for the new power layout, which are later rejected in the final utility review. This rejection forces the redesign of high-voltage cable routes and the internal layout of the new TS, directly delaying the final sign-off required for the Location Permit.2. Schedule and Contractual RisksThese risks relate to the fixed NPOO deadline and the flexible clauses regarding design responsibility.
P-002: Procurement Delay and Time Compression (Risk Bearer: Investor)
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Explanation: Due to the hard NPOO deadline (Q2 2026 Use Permit), any delay in finalizing the Main Design and obtaining the Location Permit directly reduces the time available for the construction contractor. This risk materializes if the planning phase stretches, forcing the Investor to launch the public tender (procurement) late. This results in a severely compressed construction window (shorter time for the Contractor to build), exponentially increasing the risk of failure to meet the final EU funding date. P-004: Alternative Design Triggers Rework (Risk Bearer: Contractor/Investor)
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Explanation: The project specifications grant the eventual Contractor the option to propose an alternative technical solution for the excavation pit and garage structure. The risk is that the Client invests time and resources in finalizing the Main Project only for the selected Contractor to later exercise this option, presenting a technically superior or significantly cheaper alternative. This triggers a mandatory design change procedure and a new Location Permit cycle, delaying the start of construction and creating contractual conflict over liability and schedule.3. Technical & Quality Assurance RisksThese risks address the completeness and accuracy of the technical deliverables in the Main Design.
P-003: BIM Model Failure (Risk Bearer: Designer/Investor)
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Explanation: This phase requires the production of a finalized, coordinated BIM model to serve as the basis for the Main Design. Given the documented challenge in assessing the original designer’s BIM capacity, the risk is that the Designer fails to deliver a compliant, multi-disciplinary coordinated model. This failure results in uncoordinated design documents (e.g., structural and MEP systems clash), leading to unforeseen errors during construction, and ultimately making the required Asset Information Model (AIM) deliverable impossible. P-006: New Geotechnical Findings Invalidate Design (Risk Bearer: Investor/Designer)
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Explanation: While initial data was limited, the Planning Phase often includes more detailed subsurface investigation. This risk is that the new, more extensive geotechnical investigations reveal conditions significantly worse than anticipated (e.g., an unidentified fault line, massive underground obstruction, or higher water table). This necessitates a fundamental re-design of the structural foundation and piloting plan, invalidating the Main Design and potentially requiring a new Location Permit, leading to major cost and schedule overruns.4. Stakeholder & Operational RisksThis risk addresses the final logistics plan that governs how construction interfaces with the existing judicial campus.
P-005: Judicial Stakeholder Rejection of Operational Plan (Risk Bearer: PM/Investor)
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Explanation: The project’s success hinges on uninterrupted court operations. The Main Design includes a finalized construction site organization plan (logistics, traffic, access, noise mitigation). The risk is that the final plan is deemed unacceptable by the Judicial Institutions that must continue operating on the site. Their rejection would force the Project Manager to completely redesign the entire construction logistics strategy, delaying mobilization and increasing the complexity and cost of site management.”
Appendix B.3. Claude Sonnet 4.5
“DESIGN DEVELOPMENT RISKSPP-D-01: Main Design (Glavni projekt) DevelopmentContext: The Main Design must coordinate BIM models from 6+ disciplines (architecture, structure, MEP, facade, etc.) at appropriate LOD for permit and tender. Different offices use different software and modeling standards.Why it is critical: If clashes and inconsistencies are not resolved in the planning phase, they will surface during permit review or on site, when changes are far more expensive and time critical.Real implications:
Undetected clashes force late redesigns, delaying the building permit and tender. Field conflicts lead to RFIs, claims, and rework during construction. Loss of confidence in the BIM model results in parallel 2D workflows and duplication of effort.PP-D-02: Architectural Adaptation from 2008 Competition DesignContext: The winning design from 2008 predates nZEB, current seismic requirements, and evolved judicial workflows. It must be fully updated while preserving the architectural intent.Why it is critical: Trying to force a 2008 concept into a 2020s regulatory and functional context risks a design that is either non compliant or compromised in performance and usability.Real implications:
Extensive redesign of envelope, structure, and layouts to meet current codes. Conflicts between architects defending the original vision and engineers demanding changes. Delays in design approvals and potential dissatisfaction of end users with final functionality.PP-D-03: Structural Design for Phased Construction (Phases 1 to 4)Context: Phase 1 foundations and structure must safely support future phases 2 to 4, with shared garage and vertical elements already built.Why it is critical: If future loads, joint locations, and connections are not correctly modeled now, later phases may be impossible or require very costly strengthening.Real implications:
Need for structural retrofits and underpinning when future phases are designed. Inability to connect new phases to existing structures as planned. Budget overruns and disruptions if foundations and connections must be rebuilt.PP-D-04: nZEB Energy Performance CalculationsContext: The project must meet Croatian nZEB requirements, relying on early energy modeling, airtightness assumptions, and ambitious facade performance.Why it is critical: Errors at planning stage propagate into the detailed design and tender documents. If energy performance is miscalculated now, compliance may fail at completion.Real implications:
Need for late upgrades to insulation, windows, or HVAC to meet nZEB. Increased CAPEX and OPEX if performance is worse than modeled. Risk of delayed use permit and EU funding exposure if nZEB is not achieved.(…further explanation excluded for brevity).”
Appendix C. AI-Generated Explanatory Outputs for the Executing Phase
Appendix C.1. GPT-5
“The Executing Phase of the Trg Pravde judicial infrastructure project marks the transition from design to physical construction. It involves coordination between contractors, site supervision, material supply, and regulatory oversight to ensure timely and quality delivery of the southern building and underground garage.The risk identification model for this phase highlights several operational and compliance-related risks:
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Labor and subcontractor availability—shortages of skilled labor or poor subcontractor performance may disrupt the construction schedule and cause cascading delays, particularly in specialized trades like structural systems and MEP installations.- -
Site supervision and quality control—insufficient oversight by the site engineer or general contractor can result in non-conforming works, leading to rework, delays, or long-term facility performance issues.- -
Cash flow and funding delays—delayed payments by the investor or interruptions in funding may cause suspension of works, damage contractor cash flow, and increase the risk of claims or disputes.- -
Unforeseen site conditions—unexpected underground obstacles or groundwater complications may require design modifications and delay critical path activities. These risks are amplified due to the complexity of the urban site and the presence of existing infrastructure.- -
Regulatory and safety compliance—sudden inspections or changes in safety legislation can trigger temporary work stoppages or necessitate rework to align with updated requirements.- -
Construction planning deficiencies—ineffective sequencing or poor resource coordination by the contractor can lead to inefficient use of time and materials, causing project overruns.- -
Environmental disruptions—adverse weather or on-site environmental incidents may delay progress or compromise safety. These events are especially impactful during excavation, concrete works, and façade assembly phases.Identifying and managing these risks during the Executing Phase is essential to maintaining momentum, ensuring quality, and avoiding disputes or cost escalation. Strong contractor oversight, robust site management systems, and responsive issue resolution mechanisms are key to reducing exposure and achieving successful project delivery.”
Appendix C.2. Gemini 2.5 Pro
“Here is a detailed explanation for each of the identified risks in the Executing (Construction) Phase of the Trg Pravde project, focusing on the General Contractor’s responsibility and the project’s critical constraints.Explanation of the Executing Phase Risks1.Financial and Schedule RisksThese risks directly threaten the project’s ability to meet its hard, external financing deadline.
E-001: Failure to Obtain Use Permit by Q2 2026 (Risk Bearer: GC/Investor)
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Explanation: This is the most critical risk. The project’s NPOO funding mandates a hard deadline for obtaining the final Use Permit (Uporabna dozvola) by Q2 2026. During the Executing Phase, if delays accumulate due to weather, supply chain issues, workforce shortages, or unforeseen site conditions, the Contractor faces an inability to complete the work and pass the technical inspection in time. The consequence is severe: the loss of EU co-financing, triggering massive financial penalties and potentially a contractual default.2. Technical and Environmental RisksThese risks deal with the physical challenges of the complex underground and structural work.
E-002: Geotechnical/Groundwater Failure (Risk Bearer: General Contractor)
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Explanation: The construction involves a deep excavation for a massive 49,409 m2 underground garage. Despite preliminary designs, the actual process of excavation may encounter unexpectedly high groundwater inflow or unstable soil layers not fully mapped in the limited initial studies. A failure in the Contractor’s dewatering system or excavation support structures would cause flooding, collapse potential, major schedule disruption, huge cost overruns, and even pose a safety risk to the adjacent protected buildings. E-004: Critical Quality Defects (Risk Bearer: General Contractor)
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Explanation: The quality of two specific construction elements carries immense long-term risk: waterproofing the massive underground garage and correctly installing the structural anchors/rebar for future phases (Phase 2, 3, 4). Poor workmanship in waterproofing will lead to leakage and massive lifecycle costs for the Investor. Errors in the anchors will structurally compromise the ability to connect future buildings, requiring expensive, difficult, and high-risk structural demolition and rework on the Phase 1 structure.3. Operational and Interface RisksThese risks stem from the necessity of operating a construction site adjacent to live, functioning judicial institutions.
E-003: Operational Disruption via TS Relocation (Risk Bearer: General Contractor)
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Explanation: The Executing Phase requires the physical, complex relocation of two live transformer stations (TS) that power the existing court buildings. This is a high-consequence, high-risk operational task. Any mistake in the power migration sequence (temporary switchover, demolition, final switchover) by the Contractor’s team or subcontractors will result in a power outage for the operational courts, leading to severe legal, operational, and financial penalties due to business interruption. E-005: Design Interface Disputes (Risk Bearer: General Contractor)
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Explanation: If the Contractor exercised the option to design an alternative solution for the excavation pit and garage structure, this risk materializes during construction. It involves structural or utility incompatibility clashes between the Contractor’s design (e.g., structural members or basement penetrations) and the Client’s Main Design for the superstructure (Southern Building). These unresolved clashes lead to construction stoppages, claims, and change orders.4. Regulatory and Commissioning RisksThese risks threaten the final acceptance and handover of the facility.
E-006: Subcontractor System Failure (Risk Bearer: General Contractor)
- ○
Explanation: Construction requires the finalization and commissioning of complex MEP, IT, and specialized systems (e.g., fire suppression, security). The failure of a critical subcontractor (due to poor coordination, lack of resources, or technical deficiencies) to complete, test, and provide documentation for their systems prevents the overall project from passing the technical inspection. This directly delays the issuance of the Use Permit. E-007: Use Permit Refusal (Risk Bearer: General Contractor/Investor) Explanation: This final execution risk is the refusal of the statutory authority to issue the Use Permit (Uporabna dozvola) following the final technical inspection. This is caused by non-compliance with the approved Main Design, missing required as-built documentation (including the final BIM/AIM), or a failure to demonstrate that all installed systems (e.g., fire protection) are fully operational and compliant with the law. This refusal means the building cannot be legally occupied, directly resulting in failure to meet the NPOO deadline (E-001).
Appendix C.3. Claude Sonnet 4.5
“GEOTECHNICAL RISKSEP-GEO-01: Ground ConditionsContext: Foundation and basement works are based on geotechnical assumptions from a limited investigation (soil layers, bearing capacity, stiffness). Actual conditions may deviate once full excavation is opened.Why it is critical: If real soil parameters are weaker or significantly different from design assumptions, foundations, retaining structures, and slabs may not perform as intended, directly affecting safety and stability.Real implications:
Need for unplanned ground improvement, additional piles, or deeper foundations. Redesign of structural elements already planned or partially executed. Schedule delays while new designs and approvals are obtained. Cost overruns and potential disputes over who pays for changed conditions.EP-GEO-02: Groundwater ManagementContext: The design assumes groundwater levels at approximately −11.5 m to −13.5 m. During execution, seasonal variations, heavy rain events, or regional aquifer behavior can raise levels above these assumptions.Why it is critical: Inadequate dewatering capacity or underestimated groundwater pressures can cause flooding, instability, and long term waterproofing issues.Real implications:
Flooded excavation pits, damage to reinforcement, formwork, and early concrete. Need to upgrade pumps, wells, and drainage systems at additional cost. Risk of uplift or buoyancy issues in slabs and foundations. Extensions to construction duration and risk to meeting the EU deadline.EP-GEO-03: Excavation Pit ProtectionContext: The project uses a deep excavation supported by a pile wall system with anchors. Performance depends on correct design assumptions and careful execution.Why it is critical: Any failure or excessive deformation of the temporary support system poses a severe safety and third party risk.Real implications:
Partial or full collapse of the excavation wall with material and equipment loss. Damage to public roads and adjacent properties, including operational judicial buildings. Injuries or fatalities leading to investigations, work stoppage, and possible criminal liability. Long delays while stabilization, redesign, and legal issues are addressed.EP-GEO-04: Adjacent Structure SettlementContext: Excavation and dewatering can induce ground movements that affect nearby heritage and operational court buildings.Why it is critical: Even relatively small settlements can cause cracking, functional impairment, or structural concerns in older buildings.Real implications:
Visible cracking and distortion of doors, windows, and finishes in adjacent buildings. Operational disruptions to ongoing judicial activities. Expert assessments, monitoring, and remedial works increasing costs. Legal claims, reputational damage, and stricter limits imposed on construction methods.(…further explanation excluded for brevity).”
Appendix D. AI-Generated Explanatory Outputs for the Closing Phase
Appendix D.1. GPT-5
“The Closing Phase of the Trg Pravde judicial infrastructure project centers on the final steps needed to commission the building and hand it over for operational use. A critical milestone in this phase is the issuance of the Occupancy (Usage) Permit, which legally authorizes the building’s use. Delays in obtaining this permit can significantly disrupt transition planning, user relocation, and public service continuity.The identified risks for this phase highlight key vulnerabilities:
- -
Incomplete or non-compliant documentation—if the documentation submitted for the usage permit lacks required elements or contains discrepancies, the regulatory authority may delay or reject the application, blocking formal building commissioning.- -
Delays in final inspections—postponements in scheduling mandatory technical and safety inspections due to investor-side inaction can extend the overall project closeout timeline and increase costs associated with extended construction site maintenance.- -
Outstanding non-conformities—unresolved punch list items or quality deficiencies may lead the regulatory body to withhold the permit, triggering contractor claims or requiring emergency remediation.- -
Administrative inefficiencies—high workloads or bureaucratic delays within the permitting authority can slow down the review process even when submissions are compliant, impacting operational launch dates.- -
Digital documentation gaps—failure to submit updated BIM-based as-built documentation (AIM) in accordance with project and regulatory requirements can prevent the occupancy permit from being processed, particularly in digitally integrated public-sector projects.
Managing these risks during the Closing Phase is vital to ensure a smooth and timely transition from construction to operation. Ensuring complete, high-quality documentation, proactive stakeholder coordination, and early resolution of outstanding works helps secure occupancy approvals and facilitates the full activation of judicial services within the new facility.”
Appendix D.2. Gemini 2.5 Pro
“Here is a detailed explanation for each of the identified risks in the Closing Phase of the Trg Pravde judicial infrastructure project. This phase is dominated by the urgency of regulatory compliance to secure the Use Permit by the critical NPOO deadline.1. Financial and Legal CatastropheThese risks center on the consequences of failing to meet the hard, external deadline.
CL-001: NPOO Funding Withdrawal (Risk Bearer: Investor/Government)
- ○
Explanation: This is the project’s existential risk. The use of EU funding (NPOO) dictates a non-negotiable deadline for the final Use Permit (Uporabna dozvola) by Q2 2026. If the permit is issued even a day late due to any other closing phase delays (CL-002, CL-003), the project is non-compliant with the funding agreement. The consequence is the withdrawal or clawback of the EU co-financing, leaving the Investor (the Ministry/Government) with a massive, unbudgeted financial gap that could undermine the entire project’s financial viability. CL-002: Regulatory Refusal of Use Permit (Risk Bearer: General Contractor/Investor)
- ○
Explanation: The regulatory body legally blocks the building’s occupation because the General Contractor fails to deliver complete, certified, and compliant statutory documentation. This documentation includes all technical reports, material attestations, test results, and, crucially, the finalized BIM/AIM (Asset Information Model). A refusal not only means the project missed the NPOO deadline but also that the multi-million dollar asset cannot be legally used by the Judicial Institutions, defeating the project’s purpose.2. Handover and Technical ComplianceThese risks address the final technical steps required to certify the building’s readiness.
CL-003: Protracted Correction and Re-inspection Cycle (Risk Bearer: GC/Investor)
- ○
Explanation: The final technical inspection identifies critical, systemic, or unaddressed non-compliances (e.g., fire-stopping deficiencies, structural deviations from the approved plans, or major untestable MEP systems). These issues require significant rework, forcing the Contractor into a protracted correction process. Since the regulatory body must then perform a re-inspection, this automatically consumes valuable time in the closing window, almost guaranteeing the project misses the fixed Use Permit deadline (CL-001). CL-005: Immediate Invocation of DLP for Major Defects (Risk Bearer: GC)
- ○
Explanation: Quality defects that were not fully caught during inspection become immediately apparent upon handover or during the facility’s first operational use. The most likely and costly defects include water leakage in the massive underground garage or failures in specialized, integrated systems. The Investor immediately invokes the Defects Liability Period (DLP), forcing the Contractor to mobilize and execute extensive, costly, and potentially disruptive remedial work under warranty while the building is meant to be operational.3. Contractual and Operational TransferThese risks involve the necessary transfer of liability, information, and control from the builder to the operator.
CL-004: Contractual Handover Stalemates (Risk Bearer: GC/Investor)
- ○
Explanation: At the moment of handover, the Investor and the General Contractor cannot agree on the final project cost and schedule due to unresolved claims, change orders, or outstanding liquidated damages. This contractual dispute leads to a stalemate, where the Contractor refuses to provide the final necessary statutory sign-offs (e.g., final lien waivers, as-built drawings, or compliance statements) until the dispute is settled. This action legally blocks the final step of the Use Permit application, regardless of the building’s physical completion. CL-006: Operational Deficiencies and Training Failure (Risk Bearer: Investor)
- ○
Explanation: The Investor fails to ensure that the end-users (Judicial Institutions) and the facility management team are successfully trained on the operation of the building’s complex new systems (especially the extensive garage and utility infrastructure). This results in operational delays, immediate maintenance failures, and user-induced damage upon opening, leading to disputes over the completeness of the handover and significantly increasing the facility’s operational costs and the Contractor’s warranty burden. CL-007: Political Interference in Permitting (Risk Bearer: Investor/Government)
- ○
Explanation: Due to the project’s high political visibility and the NPOO deadline, there is a risk that political pressure is applied to the regulatory body. This could result in a technically flawed or rushed Use Permit being issued (compromising safety) or, conversely, an unjustified or protracted refusal to grant the permit due to bureaucratic caution, leading to a legal and political battle over the final acceptance.”
Appendix D.3. Claude Sonnet 4.5
“TECHNICAL INSPECTION AND COMPLIANCE RISKSCP-T-01: Technical Inspection CommissionContext: Final submission for the occupancy permit requires complete technical inspection documentation, which includes detailed test results, declarations, geodetic surveys, as-built drawings, and compliance statements.Why it is critical: Any gaps or inconsistencies prevent the technical inspection commission from completing its review.Real implications:
Rejection of permit documentation due to missing or incomplete records. Resubmissions and prolonged administrative cycles. Contractor and investor forced to recompile or reproduce technical documents under time pressure. Delay in initiating the occupancy permit process, affecting the NPOO deadline.CP-T-02: Building Systems CommissioningContext: Mechanical, electrical, and specialty systems must be fully commissioned prior to inspection.Why it is critical: Unresolved performance issues or incomplete commissioning invalidate technical compliance.Real implications:
Technical commission identifies unacceptable system performance. Additional testing, balancing, or system modifications required. Extended schedule for commissioning teams already demobilizing. Permit withheld until deficiencies are fully resolved.CP-T-03: Fire Safety Compliance VerificationContext: Fire safety authorities verify systems such as sprinklers, hydrants, alarms, detectors, and evacuation routes.Why it is critical: Fire protection is one of the most stringent prerequisites for occupancy approval.Real implications:
Fire authority rejects the system due to missing components or incomplete tests. Need for corrective work in ceilings, shafts, or technical rooms. Technical inspection halted until fire safety is re-approved. Significant delays if full retesting is required.CP-T-04: Air Tightness Testing FailureContext: The building must achieve defined n50 thresholds to obtain nZEB certification and satisfy the technical inspection.Why it is critical: Airtightness deficiencies typically require invasive remediation.Real implications:
Remediation of thousands of small leaks in the envelope. Repeat blower-door testing cycles. Delay of nZEB certification and occupancy permit. Increased project cost and schedule pressure.(…further explanation excluded for brevity).”
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| Phase | Code | Risk Source | Cause/Driver | Risk (Delivery, Event, or Impact) | Affected Area | Risk Category | Risk Bearer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initiating | RCP-03 | Government/Funding Body | Delays in budget approval or EU fund allocation | Postponement of procurement and mobilization | Schedule | Financial Risk | Investor |
| Executing | RCP-17 | Investor | Late payments or disruptions in funding flow | Suspension of works or contractor claims | Cash Flow, Schedule | Financial Risk | Investor |
| Phase | Code | Risk Source | Cause/Driver | Risk (Delivery, Event, or Impact) | Affected Area | Risk Category | Risk Bearer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initiating | RCP-04 | Regulatory Bodies | Prolonged permitting or location permit issuance | Delays in start of procurement phase | Schedule | Regulatory Risk | Regulatory Authorities |
| Planning | RCP-09 | Regulatory Bodies | Delays in issuing location or building permits | Delayed start of construction and procurement processes | Schedule | Regulatory Risk | Investor/Government |
| Planning | RCP-12 | Government/Legal Framework | Changes in construction or procurement regulations | Required redesign or re-tendering | Schedule, Compliance | Regulatory Risk | Investor |
| Executing | RCP-19 | Government/Regulatory Bodies | Unannounced inspections or changes in safety standards | Temporary halts or rework to comply with regulations | Schedule, Compliance | Regulatory Risk | General Contractor |
| Closing | RCP-22 | Regulatory Body | Incomplete or non-compliant documentation submitted for usage permit | Delay in issuance of Occupancy Permit | Handover, Operational Readiness | Regulatory Risk | Investor |
| Phase | Code | Risk Source | Cause/Driver | Risk (Delivery, Event, or Impact) | Affected Area | Risk Category | Risk Bearer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initiating | RCP-01 | Investor | Inadequate definition of functional requirements in the pre-investment phase | Misalignment between final facility design and judicial operational needs | Project Scope and Quality | Requirements Risk | Investor |
| Initiating | RCP-03 | Government/Funding Body | Delays in budget approval or EU fund allocation | Postponement of procurement and mobilization | Schedule | Financial Risk | Investor |
| Initiating | RCP-05 | Environmental Constraints | Presence of protected trees and heritage-listed buildings | Constraints on design or need for redesign | Design, Scope, Schedule | Environmental Risk | Designer/Investor |
| Initiating | RCP-06 | Geotechnical Conditions | Uncertainties in subsoil and groundwater conditions | Unforeseen foundation design changes or cost increases | Cost, Design | Technical Risk | Designer/Investor |
| Initiating | RCP-07 | Stakeholder Engagement | Insufficient consultation with future building users | Misalignment of space planning and user needs | Functionality, Quality | Stakeholder Risk | Investor/Project Manager |
| Planning | RCP-09 | Regulatory Bodies | Delays in issuing location or building permits | Delayed start of construction and procurement processes | Schedule | Regulatory Risk | Investor/Government |
| Planning | RCP-10 | Investor | Late changes in project requirements or program scope | Design changes and cost escalation | Scope, Cost | Change Management Risk | Investor |
| Planning | RCP-12 | Government/Legal Framework | Changes in construction or procurement regulations | Required redesign or re-tendering | Schedule, Compliance | Regulatory Risk | Investor |
| Planning | RCP-13 | Designer | Insufficient incorporation of site-specific geotechnical conditions | Inaccurate design assumptions or foundation issues | Safety, Cost | Technical Risk | Designer/Investor |
| Planning | RCP-14 | Stakeholder (Judicial Institutions) | Inadequate involvement of end-users during design finalization | Mismatch between facility layout and functional needs | Functionality, Satisfaction | Stakeholder Risk | Investor |
| Executing | RCP-17 | Investor | Late payments or disruptions in funding flow | Suspension of works or contractor claims | Cash Flow, Schedule | Financial Risk | Investor |
| Executing | RCP-21 | Environmental Conditions | Adverse weather or environmental incidents | Delays or damages to construction works | Schedule, Safety | Environmental Risk | General Contractor/Investor |
| Closing | RCP-22 | Regulatory Body | Non-compliant documentation submitted for permit | Delay in issuance of occupancy permit | Handover, Operational Readiness | Regulatory Risk | Investor |
| Closing | RCP-23 | Investor | Delays in final inspections and approvals | Extended project closeout timeline | Schedule, Commissioning | Management Risk | Investor |
| Closing | RCP-24 | Investor | Outstanding non-conformities or punch list items | Regulatory body withholds usage permit | Quality, Compliance | Quality Control Risk | Investor/Contractor |
| Closing | RCP-26 | Investor | Failure to submit updated BIM-based as-built documentation | Permit cannot be processed or approval delayed | Documentation, Commissioning | Digital Compliance Risk | Investor |
| Phase | Code | Risk Source | Cause/Driver | Risk (Delivery, Event, or Impact) | Affected Area | Risk Category | Risk Bearer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Executing | RCP-15 | General Contractor | Shortage of skilled labor or subcontractor performance issues | Delays in construction activities and schedule slippages | Schedule | Construction Risk | General Contractor |
| Executing | RCP-16 | Site Engineer | Inadequate site supervision or quality control | Defective works or non-compliance with design specifications | Quality | Quality Assurance Risk | General Contractor/Site Engineer |
| Executing | RCP-18 | Construction Site Conditions | Unexpected underground obstacles or groundwater levels | Work stoppages or design modifications | Schedule, Cost | Technical Risk | General Contractor/Designer |
| Executing | RCP-19 | Government/Regulatory Bodies | Unannounced inspections or changes in safety standards | Temporary halts or rework to comply with regulations | Schedule, Compliance | Regulatory Risk | General Contractor |
| Executing | RCP-20 | General Contractor | Poor planning or sequencing of construction works | Inefficient resource use and project delays | Cost, Schedule | Construction Risk | General Contractor |
| Executing | RCP-21 | Environmental Conditions | Adverse weather or environmental incidents | Delays or damages to construction works | Schedule, Safety | Environmental Risk | General Contractor/Investor |
| Question | Focus | Observed Responses |
|---|---|---|
| Q11 | Missing or misclassified risks | All experts provided qualitative feedback, reporting no missing risks but noting that some risks were defined too broadly and could be specified more precisely. |
| Q22 | Usefulness of AI for initial risk identification | Rated Very useful (2/3) and Extremely useful (1/3). |
| Q23 | Trust in AI-generated risk lists | Rated Moderately trustful by all experts (3/3). |
| Q24 | Main limitation of AI-generated outputs | Responses varied, highlighting overgeneralization, dependence on provided project context, and missing critical constraints. |
| Q25 | Effectiveness of a hybrid human–AI approach | All experts answered Yes, definitely (3/3). |
| Q27 | Most accurate overall AI model | Claude Sonnet 4.5 (2/3), GPT-5 (1/3). |
| Q28 | Clearest explanations of risk analysis output | GPT-5 selected by all experts (3/3). |
| Q29 | Best understanding of project constraints | Claude Sonnet 4.5 (2/3), Gemini 2.5 Pro (1/3). |
| Q30 | Chosen AI model as primary reference | GPT-5 selected by all experts (3/3). |
| Aspect | GPT-5 | Gemini 2.5 Pro | Claude Sonnet 4.5 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Output format & size | Exported a table (Excel) with 26 risks total; brief text summary. | Provided a table in Google Sheets with 28 risks total; structured narrative explanation in a few thematic groups. | In-chat table with ~240 detailed risks total; extensive written analysis for each risk item. |
| Depth of explanation | Concise: Summarized broad risk categories in a few bullet points (focused on key issues like requirements, design, funding, etc.). | Moderate: Grouped risks into key clusters (e.g., viability, design, etc.) with clear bullet explanations highlighting causes and impacts. | High: Elaborated on each risk with context (e.g., specific data, regulations) and detailed implications; essentially a mini-report for every risk. |
| Coverage of categories | Broad but shallow: Touched on major domains (strategic, design, financial, etc.) with roughly one risk example each. | Focused breadth: Covered critical phase-specific domains (financial, technical/design, etc.) but not every possible category; prioritized the most pressing areas identified. | Comprehensive: Systematically addressed all domains, often listing multiple distinct risks per category for thorough coverage. |
| Practical usefulness | Quick overview: Easy to scan and kickstart discussion, but would need further detail from human experts for mitigation planning. | Targeted insight: Highlights top high-impact issues across the project phases, aiding prioritization; less overwhelming and context-rich, though some categories (e.g., quality, market conditions) are not explicitly covered. | In-depth resource: Very rich detail supports thorough risk planning and understanding, though the volume of information may require time for a team to digest and filter for relevance. |
| Notable strengths | Efficient broad-strokes identification; output aligns with typical high-level risk checklists a human might start with. | Balanced context-specific details with structured grouping, making the output digestible and directly relevant to the project’s situation. | Extremely detailed and context-aware, capturing nuances (e.g., funding conditions, technical specs, site history) that others omit—similar to an expert’s comprehensive report. |
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© 2026 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
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Vilibić, K.; Sigmund, Z.; Završki, I. Intelligent Risk Identification in Construction Projects: A Case Study of an AI-Based Framework. Buildings 2026, 16, 409. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020409
Vilibić K, Sigmund Z, Završki I. Intelligent Risk Identification in Construction Projects: A Case Study of an AI-Based Framework. Buildings. 2026; 16(2):409. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020409
Chicago/Turabian StyleVilibić, Kristijan, Zvonko Sigmund, and Ivica Završki. 2026. "Intelligent Risk Identification in Construction Projects: A Case Study of an AI-Based Framework" Buildings 16, no. 2: 409. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020409
APA StyleVilibić, K., Sigmund, Z., & Završki, I. (2026). Intelligent Risk Identification in Construction Projects: A Case Study of an AI-Based Framework. Buildings, 16(2), 409. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020409

