EVALUATING THE USE OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES IN QUANTITY SURVEYING PRACTICE IN BENIN CITY, EDO STATE

Year of Publication
Publication Type
Abstract
This study evaluates the use of digital technologies within the Quantity Surveying practice in Benin City, Edo State, amid global trends of digital transformation in construction. Through comprehensive data collection from local professionals, the research identifies a pronounced awareness of foundational digital tools like Microsoft Excel and AutoCAD alongside limited practical use of advanced technologies such as Building Information Modeling (BIM) and specialized cost management software. The findings reveal significant barriers rooted in high costs, inadequate infrastructure, skill gaps, and resistance to change, which collectively hinder the full integration of digital solutions despite acknowledged operational benefits including increased speed, productivity, and accuracy. Anchored in the Technology Acceptance Model and Diffusion of Innovations theory, the study underscores the critical gap between awareness and usage, highlighting the need for targeted training, supportive policy frameworks, and infrastructural development to bridge this divide. The research contributes to a nuanced understanding of digital adoption challenges in developing contexts and proposes a strategic roadmap to enhance digital capacity, fostering modernization and competitiveness of the Quantity Surveying profession in Benin City
Supervisor(s)
co-supervisor