On data-centre, life-science and other mission-critical programmes, who holds the trowel matters as much as who signs the contract. Here's why we self-deliver.
Most main contractors on a mission-critical programme manage. AAC delivers. The distinction matters more than it sounds.
Self-delivery means our supervisors, our engineers, our trades and our kit are on the work-front. Not a sub. Not a sub of a sub. When something goes wrong at 02:00, the person fixing it works for us — and gets paid by us — and has been on our induction.
It costs more to staff this way. It always has. The reason we do it is straightforward: on a mission-critical programme, the project owner cannot afford a four-tier contractor chain that re-prices risk every time the schedule slips.
The fastest way to lose a programme date is to inherit a problem from a sub-sub-sub-contractor at week 38. We don't take that bet.Operations team — AAC Group
When the rebar layout needs a change on site, the engineer who detailed it is on the same payroll as the supervisor running the pour. The fix happens in hours, not at the next contractor meeting.
A self-delivered team owns the cube result, the snag list, the handover. There's no commercial incentive to argue about whether a defect is "your" problem or "ours" — it's all one team.
Sequencing a complex slab pour, a pile-cap programme or a fast-track substation slab requires the same brain holding the cadence end-to-end. Splitting that across a sub-contractor chain is how programmes slip three weeks at a time.
There are packages where the right partner adds value — and we pick those carefully. We're honest about where AAC adds the most: groundworks, reinforced concrete, mechanical engineering, civils, fit-out. On those packages, we deliver. On the rest, we partner.
If you're thinking about a mission-critical programme and want a contractor that puts its own name on the work-front, talk to us.