Civil Engineering PE Exam – Quantity Take-Off Methods
Copyright ©All Rights Reserved
No part of this material may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping, or by any information storage retrieval system, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews, without written permission.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any Web addresses or links contained in this material may have changed since publication and may no loner be valid.
Any resemblance in the images in this material to actual people or locations is merely coincidental. Images in this material may not be reprinted, copied, modified, reproduced, published, uploaded, posted, transmitted, or utilized in any other manner without written permission.
I. Project Planning
A. Quantity Take-Off Methods
Quantity Take-Off Methods require detailed measurements of a building’s components, materials, and construction labor to determine a scope of work required and a cost estimate of the construction project. The values for Quantity Take-Off Methods are typically measured and calculated by building construction estimators using the construction documents, building plans, and specifications to determine the scope and cost estimate.
Quantity Take-Off Methods on the Civil Engineering PE Exam will test your ability to measure and calculate various building materials or components such as:
- Building Materials
- Roofing
- Walls
- Flooring
- Site Development
- Soil cut and fill
- Landscaping
- Hardscaping
- Structure
- Steel
- Concrete
- Wood (Timber)
- Foundations
- Retaining Walls
- Footings
Helpful resources in preparing for these questions are:
- Learn Civil Engineering – further instructions and guidance as well as several practice problems.
- Cost Estimation – the Project Management for Construction website.
- Cost Estimating – the Whole Building Design Guide website, a program of the National Institute of Building Sciences.
- Glossary of Construction Cost Estimating – Wikipedia glossary of terms related to construction cost estimating.
The ability to know which unit of measure is needed and to calculate various quantities is a must-have skill for these types of questions.
For example:
- Earthwork – measured in cubic yards (PowerPoint presentation)
- Concrete – measured in cubic yards
- Masonry – measured in number of bricks or blocks
- Mortar – measured in cubic feet
- Lumber – measured in board feet (Board feet = (thickness x width x length) ÷ 144)
- Roofing – measured in square feet
- Siding, Flooring, etc. – measured in square feet
- Structural Steel – measured in pounds or tons