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This course is about understanding schedule of rates for construction projects in GCC countries. It explains how rates are built, adjusted, compared, and used for project budgeting, tendering, billing, and cost control in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait.
Construction professionals, civil engineers, quantity surveyors, estimators, project managers, consultants, contractors, billing engineers, procurement staff, and site professionals working on GCC projects can join this course.
Yes. The course is made for professionals who want to understand GCC project rates, regional cost conditions, local taxes, import duties, material rates, preliminaries, and trade-wise rate preparation.
The course is focused on Saudi Arabia, UAE, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait.
A schedule of rates is a structured list of construction work items with units and rates. It helps in pricing, tendering, valuation, billing, variation assessment, and project cost control.
GCC projects often have different material sources, labour markets, climate effects, taxes, import duties, and local approval requirements. A proper schedule of rates helps professionals price work more realistically.
Yes. Beginners can join because the course starts with introduction, calibration, location factors, unit conversion, taxes, inflation, and then moves into trade-wise rate understanding.
Yes. Experienced quantity surveyors can use this course to improve GCC pricing logic, compare rates between countries, and understand how regional conditions affect project cost.
Yes. Civil engineers can benefit because project rates affect tendering, material planning, subcontractor comparison, billing, claims, and site decision-making.
You can join the course from the official BHADANIS course page here:
The course language is English.
The course validity shown is 365 days.
The course page shows ₹14,500 after discount. Please check the course page before joining because the displayed price can change.
The course page shows 24 modules, including core construction divisions and separate country-wise building material rate sections.
The course includes 84 sessions.
The total course duration shown is 4 hours, 23 minutes, and 20 seconds.
Yes, the course page shows a preview option. You can check the course page before enrolling.
Yes. After successful purchase, the course is added to your course library and can be accessed after login.
Yes. You can access the course from a computer after successful login.
Yes. You can access your course library through a browser on other devices also.
Module 1 covers introduction, calibration, location factors, unit conversion, import duties, VAT, regional taxes, inflation indexes, and their impact on project budgeting.
Calibration means adjusting rates according to project location, country conditions, city cost level, labour availability, transport distance, market price, and local project requirements.
Rates in Dubai, Riyadh, Doha, Muscat, Manama, Kuwait City, and other GCC locations may not be the same. Location factors help adjust rates more sensibly.
Yes. The course explains conversion between imperial and metric units because different project documents may use different measurement references.
Yes. The course explains import duties, VAT, and other regional tax impacts on project budgets.
Inflation can change material prices, labour cost, equipment rental, transport cost, and supplier quotations. A professional must understand this before freezing a budget.
Module 2 covers cost benchmarks and comparison methods for GCC project types. It helps learners understand how to compare project costs across different countries and project categories.
Yes. The course explains how to compare project rates and costs using suitable benchmarks for regional construction conditions.
Yes. Schedule of rates knowledge is very useful for tender pricing because it helps you build realistic rates and compare tender amounts properly.
Yes. It helps in preparing project budgets by understanding rate build-up, preliminaries, trade-wise rates, taxes, location factors, and regional market influence.
Module 3 covers general requirements and preliminaries, including insurance, permits, temporary utilities, equipment rental practices, site setup, and project support costs.
Preliminaries are project support costs required to run the site. They may include supervision, temporary facilities, safety, insurance, permits, site offices, utilities, access, and general project management expenses.
GCC projects may need special site arrangements due to heat, logistics, temporary services, labour accommodation, transport, safety, authority requirements, and project size.
Yes. Equipment rental practices are included as part of preliminaries and construction cost planning.
Module 4 covers site construction, including demolition, excavation, piling, marine works, site utilities, and related work items.
Yes. Demolition is covered as part of site construction, including rate considerations and project conditions that can affect the cost.
Yes. Excavation is included, along with GCC project conditions such as soil type, disposal distance, access, dewatering, and equipment productivity.
Yes. Piling is included in the site construction section, especially for projects where deep foundations are required.
Yes. Marine works are included, which is useful for coastal projects, ports, waterfront works, and island developments in GCC countries.
Yes. Site utilities are covered as part of the site construction module.
Module 5 covers concrete work, including mix design, formwork, reinforcement, precast work, and quality control.
Yes. It explains concrete-related rate factors such as material, labour, formwork, reinforcement, placing method, quality control, wastage, and project conditions.
Yes. Formwork is covered as part of concrete work because it has a major cost impact in buildings and infrastructure projects.
Yes. Reinforcement is included, along with rate considerations for steel, cutting, bending, placing, wastage, and project requirements.
Yes. Precast work is included, especially where factory-made concrete elements are used in GCC construction.
Module 6 covers masonry and brickwork, including regional standards, blockwork, brickwork, and special masonry applications.
Yes. The course covers masonry and blockwork rate considerations such as blocks, mortar, labour, wastage, access, height, thickness, and finishing requirements.
Yes. Refractory applications are included where high-temperature resistant masonry is required in industrial or special construction work.
Module 7 covers metals and structural steel, including fabrication, erection, decking, connections, and compliance-related cost factors.
Yes. Structural steel rate factors are covered, including material supply, fabrication, erection, lifting, bolts, welding, coatings, transport, and site conditions.
Yes. Steel erection is included because lifting, access, cranes, safety, height, and connection details can change the rate.
Yes. Steel decking is covered as part of metals and structural steel work.
Module 8 covers wood, plastics, and framing, including carpentry, special items, and sustainable material selection.
Yes. Carpentry rate factors are covered, including material type, labour, finishing, fixing method, wastage, and project specification.
Module 9 covers thermal and moisture protection, including waterproofing, roofing, caulking, sealants, and insulation.
Yes. Waterproofing is included, with focus on surface preparation, material type, application method, layers, protection, testing, and warranty-related cost impact.
GCC projects face heat, humidity, coastal exposure, roof movement, and water leakage risks. Good waterproofing rate understanding is important for both pricing and quality.
Yes. Insulation is included because energy performance and heat protection are important in GCC buildings.
Module 10 covers doors and windows, including specification, installation, glazing, curtain walls, hardware, and related rate factors.
Yes. The course covers doors, windows, glazing, curtain wall items, hardware, fixing, sealants, access, and finishing-related cost points.
Yes. Curtain walls are included in the doors and windows module.
Module 11 covers finishes, including plaster, gypsum, tile work, flooring, wall finishes, acoustics, coatings, and finishing-related rate factors.
Yes. Plaster rates are covered, including surface condition, thickness, material, labour, height, curing, and finishing requirements.
Yes. Gypsum work is included in the finishes module.
Yes. Tile work is covered, including material, size, fixing method, adhesive, grout, wastage, cutting, surface preparation, and location.
Yes. Flooring rates are included as part of finishes.
Module 12 covers specialties such as display boards, louvers, vents, cubicles, guards, and commercial specialty items.
Specialty items are often missed or underpriced. They may look small, but in commercial and public projects they can affect the total project cost.
Module 13 covers equipment items, including maintenance equipment, loading dock equipment, lab equipment, material handling equipment, and process-related project items.
Yes. Loading dock equipment is included in the equipment section.
Yes. Lab and material handling equipment are included in the course.
Module 14 covers furnishings, procurement, installation, manufactured casework, and project-specific furniture-related rate considerations.
Yes. Manufactured casework is included, which is useful for offices, hospitals, schools, hotels, laboratories, and commercial buildings.
Module 15 covers special construction, including pre-engineered buildings, radiation protection, tanks, security items, and surveillance-related work.
Yes. Pre-engineered buildings are included, especially for industrial, warehouse, logistics, and large-span GCC projects.
Yes. Tanks are included as part of special construction.
Yes. Security and surveillance-related items are covered as part of special construction and project requirements.
Module 16 covers conveying systems, including elevators, escalators, moving walks, hoists, and cranes.
Yes. Elevator-related cost factors are covered, including type, capacity, speed, finishes, installation, testing, and project specification.
Yes. Escalators are included in the conveying systems module.
Yes. Hoists and cranes are included where they form part of project systems or construction requirements.
Module 17 covers mechanical systems, including piping, plumbing, process piping, fire protection, HVAC, and energy-efficient solutions.
Yes. Plumbing rate factors are covered, including pipe material, fittings, valves, fixtures, labour, testing, insulation, supports, and site conditions.
Yes. Fire protection is included, which is important for buildings, industrial projects, high-rise projects, and authority approvals.
Yes. HVAC work is included, covering rate factors for equipment, ducts, pipes, insulation, controls, installation, testing, and commissioning.
Module 18 covers electrical, instrumentation, and process equipment, including power systems, cable management, smart building controls, and process-related equipment.
Yes. Electrical rate factors are covered, including cables, conduits, trays, panels, fixtures, accessories, testing, installation, and project specification.
Yes. Cable management is included as part of electrical and instrumentation work.
Yes. Process equipment is included, especially for industrial, utility, refinery, plant, and infrastructure-type projects.
Yes. The course includes a section on building material rates in Saudi Arabia.
Yes. The course includes a section on building material rates in UAE.
Yes. The course includes a section on building material rates in Oman.
Yes. The course includes a section on building material rates in Qatar.
Yes. The course includes a section on building material rates in Bahrain.
Yes. The course includes a section on building material rates in Kuwait.
Yes. When you understand location factors, preliminaries, trade rates, material rates, labour cost, taxes, inflation, and GCC project conditions, you can prepare more competitive and realistic bids.
Yes. Schedule of rates knowledge helps in checking actual cost, comparing subcontractor prices, preparing variations, reviewing bills, and controlling project expenditure.
Yes. Consultants can use this course to understand rate checking, budget review, tender analysis, cost comparison, variation review, and project reporting.
Yes. Contractors can use this course for tender pricing, procurement planning, subcontractor rate comparison, billing, variation pricing, and project cost monitoring.
BHADANIS has designed this course for construction professionals who want practical understanding of GCC project pricing. It covers country-wise rate awareness, trade-wise cost structure, preliminaries, material rates, taxes, location factors, and real construction project needs in a direct and useful way.