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This course is about project management for roads and highways, especially from the NHAI project point of view. It covers project documents, pre-construction work, construction phase management, and practical Excel formats used for project control.
Civil engineers, highway engineers, road project engineers, planning engineers, site engineers, quantity surveyors, contractors, project coordinators, and professionals working on road and highway projects can join this course.
Yes. This course is useful for civil engineers in India who want to understand road and highway project management from the planning stage to construction stage.
No. The course is focused on NHAI roads and highways project management, but the learning is useful for other highway, road, infrastructure, and public works projects also.
Yes. Fresh civil engineers can join this course to understand how road projects are managed, what documents are used, and how pre-construction and construction activities are handled.
Yes. Experienced engineers can use this course to improve project management, documentation, coordination, reporting, and Excel-based project control skills.
The main purpose is to help civil engineers understand practical road project management, especially project documents, pre-construction activities, construction phase control, and working formats.
NHAI project management means managing road and highway project activities in a structured way, including documents, approvals, land-related issues, planning, execution, reporting, quality, safety, cost, and progress.
Road and highway projects are not managed only by site work. Engineers must also understand documents, approvals, pre-construction planning, construction progress, reporting, formats, coordination, and contract responsibilities.
You can join from the official BHADANIS course page here:
The course language is English.
The course includes 5 modules.
The course includes 73 sessions.
The total course duration shown is 6 hours, 25 minutes, and 15 seconds.
Yes. This is an online course. After successful purchase, the course is added to your course library.
Yes. You can access the course from a computer after login.
Yes. You can access your course library through a browser on other devices also.
Yes. The course page shows a preview option so learners can check the course before joining.
Yes. The course includes a project document for practice, which helps learners understand how real road project documents are studied.
The course page mentions an NHAI project document related to Veerasandra junction for practice.
Project document practice is important because engineers must learn how to read project details, understand scope, identify responsibilities, and connect documents with actual site work.
This module gives learners a project document to study and practice, so they can understand how highway project information is organized.
The pre-construction phase module covers project management activities before actual road construction starts. It helps learners understand preparation, documents, approvals, coordination, and planning work.
If the pre-construction phase is weak, the project may face delays, land issues, utility problems, design confusion, resource shortage, and approval-related hurdles during construction.
Common activities include document study, site visit, land availability review, utility identification, design review, permits, work planning, survey coordination, traffic planning, and resource preparation.
Yes. The course helps learners understand the importance of approvals and documentation before road construction activities begin.
Road projects often involve land access and work-front availability. This course helps learners understand why such issues must be tracked carefully during project management.
Yes. Utility shifting is a common road project challenge. Engineers need to coordinate, track, and document utility-related issues properly.
Yes. The pre-construction module is useful for understanding how planning is done before site execution begins.
Yes. The project document practice and project management modules help learners understand how to read and use road project documents.
Construction phase project management covers execution monitoring, work progress, resource coordination, site reporting, quality checks, safety coordination, contractor follow-up, and document control.
During construction, many things happen together: earthwork, pavement, drainage, structures, traffic diversion, utilities, materials, equipment, labour, billing, and reporting. Proper management keeps the project under control.
Yes. The construction phase module is focused on project management during execution.
Yes. Road projects require coordination between client, contractor, consultant, site team, survey team, quality team, safety team, vendors, and local authorities.
Yes. Site engineers can use this course to understand project documents, construction phase activities, reporting, formats, and highway project coordination.
Yes. Planning engineers can benefit from pre-construction planning, construction phase tracking, progress monitoring, and Excel-based formats.
Yes. Quantity surveyors can use this course to understand project documents, work progress, measurement coordination, billing support, and project records.
Yes. Project managers can use the course to improve understanding of road project workflow, document tracking, progress coordination, and reporting.
Yes. The course includes Excel formats for NHAI project management.
Excel formats help engineers track activities, documents, progress, quantities, issues, approvals, resources, and reports in an organized way.
Yes. The course page shows one module for Excel formats and another module for more Excel formats.
Useful formats may include progress reports, document trackers, approval trackers, issue logs, activity trackers, material records, site observation formats, and project coordination sheets.
Yes. The course is useful for learning practical documentation because road projects depend heavily on records, reports, formats, and approvals.
Documentation helps prove work progress, approvals, delays, changes, inspections, quality checks, payments, and project decisions.
Yes. Excel formats and construction phase management learning can help engineers prepare and maintain project reports.
Yes. Road project teams need regular reporting, and this course helps learners understand how reporting fits into project management.
Yes. Project tracking is part of project management during both pre-construction and construction phases.
Important tracking items include progress, land availability, utility shifting, drawings, approvals, material delivery, resources, quality inspections, safety observations, delays, and pending issues.
Yes. Progress monitoring is a key part of road and highway project management.
Without progress monitoring, delays are noticed late. Proper tracking helps the team take corrective action before the project slips too much.
The course helps learners understand project management during construction, so road construction sequence and execution tracking become easier to follow.
A common sequence includes site survey, clearing, earthwork, subgrade, sub-base, base course, pavement layers, drainage, structures, shoulders, road furniture, safety works, and finishing.
Yes. Road project management requires regular contractor coordination, progress review, work-front planning, quality follow-up, and issue closure.
Yes. Highway projects usually require coordination with consultants for drawings, approvals, inspections, measurements, and technical clarifications.
Yes. Project managers and engineers must communicate progress, issues, delays, approvals, and reports to the client side properly.
Work-front management is an important part of road projects. The course helps learners understand pre-construction and construction phase control where work-front readiness matters.
Work-front management means making sure the site area is ready for construction with land access, drawings, approvals, materials, manpower, equipment, and safety arrangements.
Road projects may get delayed due to land issues, utility shifting, approval delay, material shortage, weather, design changes, traffic problems, contractor delays, and local site constraints.
Yes. Road project management formats and construction phase monitoring help learners understand how delay issues can be tracked.
Yes. Excel-based tracking formats can help learners understand how issue logs are maintained in project management.
An issue log is a record of project problems, responsible persons, target closure dates, current status, and remarks.
Yes. Approval tracking is important in road projects and can be managed through proper project formats.
Approvals may include drawings, method statements, materials, traffic diversions, utility permissions, work permits, quality plans, and site instructions.
Yes. Construction phase project management includes the need for timely material planning and coordination.
Material delays can stop earthwork, drainage, pavement, concrete works, structures, and finishing activities.
Yes. Road projects require equipment like excavators, graders, rollers, pavers, batching support, transport vehicles, and other machinery. Managing their availability is important.
Yes. Manpower planning is part of road project execution control.
Wrong manpower planning can create idle labour, delayed work, poor productivity, and increased project cost.
Yes. Quality checks, inspection records, and approval tracking are part of proper highway project management.
Common checks include soil compaction, material testing, concrete quality, asphalt quality, layer thickness, levels, alignment, drainage slope, and structure-related checks.
Yes. Road and highway project management also needs safety coordination, especially where traffic, heavy equipment, excavation, lifting, and public movement are involved.
Highway construction has risks from moving vehicles, heavy equipment, deep excavation, night work, traffic diversions, and public interface. Safety cannot be treated casually.
Road projects often need traffic diversion and public safety coordination. This course supports project management thinking around such site issues.
Yes. The pre-construction phase module helps learners understand checklist-based preparation before work starts.
The team should check land availability, drawings, approvals, utilities, survey control, traffic arrangements, materials, equipment, manpower, camp setup, and reporting system.
Yes. Project documents, reports, issue logs, and progress formats help engineers prepare better for site meetings.
Common topics include progress, delays, approvals, drawings, utilities, safety, quality, resources, payments, risks, and pending decisions.
Yes. Proper follow-up of decisions and pending points is an important part of project management.
Yes. Road projects involve many parties, and this course helps learners understand the importance of role clarity and responsibility tracking.
Yes. Good project management depends on clear communication, proper reports, timely updates, and written records.
Yes. The course divides learning into project document practice, pre-construction phase, construction phase, and practical formats.
Pre-construction is preparation before site work starts. Construction phase is actual execution, monitoring, reporting, quality checking, safety control, and progress management.
Proper project formats and documentation help in maintaining records that are useful during reviews and audits.
Yes. Record keeping is one of the most important habits in road project management.
Teams should maintain drawings, approvals, progress reports, test reports, inspection records, site instructions, issue logs, delay records, material records, and meeting records.
Yes. Project control means tracking time, cost, scope, resources, quality, safety, approvals, and project risks. The course helps learners understand this control system.
Yes. The course includes Excel formats for NHAI project management and additional Excel formats.
Yes. Excel is widely used for trackers, reports, summaries, logs, quantity records, progress sheets, and management formats.
The course includes practical Excel formats that can support project tracking and summary preparation.
Yes. Learners can speak more confidently about NHAI project documents, pre-construction work, construction phase management, reporting, and project formats.
Yes. Contractors can use this course to improve documentation, progress tracking, site coordination, approval follow-up, and construction phase management.
Yes. Consultants can use this course to strengthen project monitoring, document review, reporting, inspection coordination, and progress follow-up.
Yes. Engineers working on public road projects can benefit from understanding documentation, phase-wise project management, and practical reporting systems.
Yes. It helps learners understand how road projects move from document review and preparation to actual construction phase management.
Yes. The course includes a practice project document and Excel formats, which makes the learning more practical.
Yes. Freshers can use it to understand road project management basics and prepare for road project roles.
Yes. Since it is online, working professionals can study through their course library after enrollment.
This course is focused specifically on NHAI roads and highways project management, with project document practice and Excel formats for practical project control.
BHADANIS has designed this course for civil engineers who want practical road and highway project management knowledge. The course keeps the learning focused on project documents, pre-construction phase, construction phase, and useful project formats.
You can enroll from the official BHADANIS course page here: