CSI and CSC release MasterFormat 2014 update
Includes several significant revisions
By Construction Specifications Institute
CSI and CSC recently released the 2014 updates to MasterFormat, their flagship product used to organize construction documents for commercial, industrial, and institutional building projects in the U.S. and Canada.
Several significant revisions are included in this update, among them the addition of “selective demolition” sections to most divisions of the format, providing guidance for companies and project managers who need to incorporate demolition into their plans.
“The 2014 updates to MasterFormat take into account the valuable feedback provided by its users over the past two years,” said CSI Executive Director and CEO Walter Marlowe, P.E., CSI. “We greatly appreciate their feedback as we strive to make MasterFormat the most accessible and expansive guide for the A/E/C industries.”
“These changes continue to ensure that MasterFormat reflects the current needs of its users,” said CSC President Mike Garlinski. “We are pleased that so many users take the time to supply their input, especially the members of the Hydraulic Institute who contributed to the 2014 updates.”
Additional changes in the 2014 edition include:
- Renaming Division 40 from “Process Equipment” to “Process Interconnections,” and overhauling its content;
- Reorganizing “Process Liquid Pumps” in Division 43, as a result of input from members of the Hydraulic Institute;
- Moving “Manufactured Planters” and “Site Seating and Tables” to Division 32 to better align with other site-based work and renaming their former Division 12 location to “Interior Public Space Furnishings” to address similar types of furnishings used in indoor settings;
- Revising “Equipment” in Division 11 to update, simplify and rationalize its content and organization; and
- Expanding “Agreement Forms” in Section 00 52 00 to improve alignment with standard forms of agreement.
MasterFormat is a master list of numbers and titles classified by work results for construction practices, used to organize project manuals, detail cost information, and relate drawing notations to specifications. By fostering fuller and more detailed construction specifications, MasterFormat is designed to reduce costly changes and delays in projects due to incomplete, misplaced, or missing information. For more information on the 2014 updates, please visit www.masterformat.com.
About the Author
The Construction Specifications Institute (CSI) is a national association dedicated to improving the documentation, management, and communication of building information as used by the construction community.