Gallery
Procurement context
Visual references supporting this guide with landscape scope and detailing context.
How does zoning logic drive irrigation scope and cost?
Zoning logic determines how many valves/lines/controllers you need and how coverage is verified against design intent.
When zoning assumptions are unclear, installation and commissioning can turn into rework.
Why does filtration and water quality matter for costs?
Water quality influences filtration requirements and maintenance needs, which directly affects what a tender must include upfront.
Procurement can reduce long-term cost surprises by requiring water-quality assumptions be stated and matched to the BOQ.
What installation details should be in procurement documents?
Include installation details like pipe layout intent, emitter/line sizing assumptions, and commissioning steps so acceptance can be verified on-site.
For terraces and podiums, specify interfaces where irrigation penetrates or interacts with waterproofing and drainage.
Which commissioning and acceptance checks protect FM?
Commissioning should include coverage checks, controller/program validation, and recorded commissioning outputs that FM can reference.
As-builts should capture the final layout and provide enough documentation for maintenance without guesswork.
How does AMC scope change the real irrigation cost?
The real cost is the total lifecycle expectation: routine maintenance, response cadence for failures, and replacement boundaries during establishment.
Procurement should align AMC terms with what was accepted at commissioning.
How can the irrigation system cost calculator help planning?
Use the irrigation cost calculator for scenario planning inputs, then validate that the selected assumptions match your BOQ zoning and filtration approach.
This helps procurement plan meaningfully while keeping final pricing tied to a verified scope.




