Authored by William A. Davis, RA, AIA, NCARB, Director, Architectural Engineering
Published June 28, 2026.
Case Study Overview
How rigorous construction administration and independent field oversight delivered quality-controlled repairs, proactive scope management, and full budget transparency across a multi-phase facade restoration project in Manhattan
|
SERVICE LINES |
SECTOR |
LOCATION |
ASSET |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Facade Restoration, Construction Administration |
Multi-Family Residential |
New York, NY |
High-Rise Residential Building |
|
$31,461 |
31 |
12+ |
0 |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Remaining Allowance Returned |
Field Reviews Conducted |
Allowance Line Items Tracked |
Option Punchlist Items at Closeout |
The Situation: An Aging Envelope and Active FISP Exposure
Facade deterioration is a fact of life for aging urban buildings. For a high-rise residential property in Manhattan’s Gramercy neighborhood, years of exposure to freeze-thaw cycles, moisture infiltration, and general weathering had taken a visible toll on the building’s east elevation. The scope of required repairs was extensive, spanning multiple floors and requiring careful sequencing of scaffolding, skilled masonry trades, and rigorous quality oversight.
In New York City, facade work at this scale is not just a maintenance decision. Local Law 11 (the Facade Inspection Safety Program, or FISP) requires periodic inspection and active remediation of unsafe conditions on any exterior wall above the sixth story. The east elevation of this property was under active FISP remediation, which meant the work had to meet both engineering specifications and regulatory expectations, with a defensible record of compliance at closeout.
“Facade restoration on an occupied high-rise demands more than a specification and a contractor. It demands an independent observer who can verify that what was specified is what actually gets built.” – William A. Davis, RA, AIA, NCARB, Director, Architectural Engineering
Rimkus was engaged to provide construction administration and field inspection services, acting as the owner’s eyes and ears throughout the repair process. From the first scaffold drop to final punch list resolution, Rimkus documented conditions, tracked allowance quantities, and held the contractor accountable to specification.
The Engagement: Construction Administration and Field Oversight
Rimkus was engaged to provide full construction administration and quality control oversight for the east elevation facade restoration. The scope covered every major dimension of field review, contractor accountability, and closeout documentation required on a FISP remediation project.
Scope of Construction Administration and Field Review Services
- Regular on-site field inspections, with Field Review No. 31 marking the final inspection at this building
- Masonry repair oversight: repointing, crack repair, and face brick replacement, including alignment, joint width, and color matching at glazed band courses
- Verification of mortar joint profile consistency (concave tooling as specified)
- Sounding of patch repairs to verify integrity and bond with substrate
- Sealant replacement review at windowsills and the underside of concrete eyebrows
- Cementitious patch review at projecting balcony edges and scaffold anchor penetrations
- Real-time allowance quantity tracking across 12+ line items, with cumulative reporting to the owner
- Daily and cumulative punch list management through project closeout
- Final-inspection photographic documentation of all completed work, including scaffold anchor repointing
What the Work Uncovered: Conditions Beyond the Original Scope
Projects of this nature rarely unfold without surprises. Several conditions emerged during construction that required real-time decision-making and scope adjustments, each quantified and added to the allowance with the owner’s concurrence before the work proceeded.
Field Conditions Added to the Original Repair Scope
- Cracked and deteriorated mortar joints found at floors beyond the originally identified areas, requiring additional repointing at the 7th, 13th, and 16th floors, adding 8 linear feet to the allowance
- Debonding paint at the 3rd floor requiring removal and recoating, identified during the final inspection rather than the initial survey
- Scaffold anchor penetrations requiring repointing as scaffolding was removed, with photographic documentation to confirm completion
- Blue glazed band courses requiring color-matched coating on replacement face brick, adding a quality-control complexity not always present in standard repointing projects
- Balcony perimeter edges across multiple floors requiring cementitious patching and coating, expanding the original concrete repair scope
Quality Control in Practice: Verification at Every Layer
The value of a field review program is measured not by the number of inspections on the calendar, but by the defensibility of the work at closeout. On this project, Rimkus applied a layered verification approach: repointing was checked for mortar joint profile consistency and tooling compliance, patch repairs were sounded to confirm bond with the substrate, and face brick replacements were reviewed for alignment, joint width, and color match at the blue glazed band courses.
A key moment in the quality control sequence came at the final inspection, when debonding coating was identified at the 3rd floor. Had the debonding gone undetected, the recoating cost would have fallen on the owner as a warranty dispute after contractor demobilization. Catching it before acceptance kept the remediation within the contractor’s scope and the original schedule.
“Debonding coating caught at final inspection, before acceptance, preventing a post-closeout warranty dispute.” – William A. Davis, RA, AIA, NCARB, Director, Architectural Engineering
Scaffold anchor penetrations were repointed as the scaffolding came down, with photographic documentation of each location. These are the repair points most often missed on facade jobs, because they are only accessible during scaffold removal, and they are a common source of water infiltration if left incomplete. The photographic record provides a defensible paper trail for the owner, the filing engineer, and any future FISP cycle.
Closeout Accounting: Transparent Allowance Tracking
On a facade restoration project with an allowance-based contract, the owner’s financial protection depends on how accurately the allowance is tracked and how cleanly it is reconciled at closeout. Rimkus tracked allowance quantities across more than a dozen line items in real time, with each field-identified condition quantified, priced, and added to the allowance only after the owner’s concurrence.
|
Closeout Summary |
|
|---|---|
|
Remaining Allowance Balance |
$31,461 returned to the owner with full line-item documentation |
|
Allowance Line Items Tracked |
12+ line items, updated in real time throughout construction |
|
Final Field Review |
Field Review No. 31, with punch list confirmed complete |
|
Open Punch List Items at Closeout |
0, beyond three contractor-directed items issued at final inspection with a specific deadline |
|
Photographic Documentation |
Complete record of all repair locations, including scaffold anchor repointing |
|
FISP Documentation |
Defensible compliance record delivered to owner for future inspection cycles |
The Value Delivered: What the Owner Gained
Transparent allowance reconciliation
The $31,461 unused allowance was returned to the owner with full line-item documentation, not absorbed into the final invoice. Every addition to the allowance was tied to a specific field condition, quantified before the work began.
Quality assurance at closeout
Every repair location was sounded and visually verified. The debonding coating caught at the 3rd floor was remediated under the contractor’s scope before acceptance, avoiding a post-closeout warranty dispute.
A clean punch list at closeout
No open items beyond three contractor-directed items issued on the day of final inspection, each with clear accountability and a specific deadline.
A defensible compliance record
Photographic documentation of all completed work, including scaffold anchor repointing, gives the owner a record that stands up to future FISP cycles and any subsequent filing engineer review.
Proactive scope management
Additional mortar cracking identified during inspection was immediately quantified, priced, and added to the allowance with the owner’s concurrence. No surprises on the final invoice.
Key Takeaways for Building Owners and Managers
Field Conditions Added to the Original Repair Scope
- Allowance-based contracts protect the owner only when the allowance is actively tracked. Line-item reconciliation at closeout is the evidence that budget transparency was maintained throughout.
- The most consequential repairs are often the ones discovered during construction, not during the initial survey. An independent observer with authority to quantify and price added conditions prevents scope creep from becoming a dispute.
- Scaffold anchor penetrations are a common source of water infiltration and a frequent miss on facade jobs. Photographic verification during scaffold removal is the only reliable record that these repairs were completed.
- Final-inspection findings are not just cosmetic. Catching defects such as debonding coating before acceptance keeps remediation within the contractor’s scope and avoids warranty disputes after demobilization.
- In New York City, FISP remediation produces a compliance record that will be reviewed on every subsequent cycle. Photographic documentation, punch list resolution, and allowance reconciliation are not administrative overhead. They are the owner’s defensible file.
- Independent construction administration is not a duplicate of the contractor’s quality control. It is the owner’s verification that what was specified is what actually gets built.
Connect with Our New York Office
The Rimkus New York team provides construction administration, facade restoration consulting, FISP filing support, and field inspection services for owners and managers of high-rise residential and commercial buildings across the five boroughs. Our team combines engineering expertise with hands-on field experience to protect owner investment through every phase of a restoration project.
Connect with a member of our New York team or submit a request for consultation today!
Meet the Expert: William A. Davis, RA, AIA, NCARB

Director, Architectural Engineering
Built Environment Solutions, New York
+1 862 310 7138
[email protected]
View William’s Expert Profile
William is a registered professional architect with more than 20 years of experience investigating and restoring building envelopes throughout New York City. He has expertise in all aspects of restoration, including roofing, masonry, waterproofing, and the Façade Inspection and Safety Program (FISP). William is also a qualified exterior wall inspector (QEWI) in New York City, working with property managers, contractors, condo boards, owners, and attorneys.
This case study is intended to provide general information and insights into prevailing industry practices. It is not intended to constitute, and should not be relied upon as, legal, technical, or professional advice. The content does not replace consultation with a qualified expert or professional regarding the specific facts and circumstances of any particular matter.