2026, Vol. 7, Issue 1, Part A
Common construction defects in urban buildings: Findings from a field-based defect investigation research
Author(s): Marco Bellini and Elena García-Ramos
Abstract: Urban buildings are increasingly affected by construction defects that compromise structural safety, serviceability, and durability, particularly in rapidly expanding cities where construction timelines and regulatory enforcement are often constrained. This field-based defect investigation research examines the prevalence, nature, and distribution of common construction defects observed in urban buildings through systematic on-site inspections. The research focuses on defects related to concrete quality, reinforcement placement, masonry workmanship, waterproofing failures, finishing deficiencies, and service integration errors. Data were collected from a representative sample of occupied and newly constructed buildings using standardized visual survey protocols, defect classification checklists, and photographic documentation. The findings reveal that workmanship-related defects dominate across building types, with cracking, honeycombing, improper cover to reinforcement, dampness, and misalignment of components occurring frequently. Environmental exposure, inadequate supervision, material variability, and deviations from design specifications emerged as major contributing factors. The research highlights that many observed defects originate during early construction stages but remain undetected until occupancy, when rectification becomes technically complex and economically burdensome. By documenting defect patterns and their likely causes, this investigation underscores the importance of proactive quality control, skilled labor deployment, and systematic inspection regimes during construction. The results provide practical insights for engineers, architects, and urban authorities to strengthen defect prevention strategies and improve construction outcomes. Ultimately, the research contributes empirical evidence to support field-based diagnostic approaches as an effective tool for enhancing building performance, extending service life, and reducing long-term maintenance costs in urban built environments. These insights are particularly relevant for fast-growing metropolitan regions, where consistent application of codes, timely inspections, and feedback from field investigations can bridge gaps between design intent and construction practice, fostering safer buildings, improved accountability, and more resilient urban infrastructure over time while supporting evidence-based policy decisions and continuous professional learning across public and private construction sectors in diverse urban contexts.
DOI: 10.22271/2707840X.2026.v7.i1a.53Pages: 13-15 | Views: 2 | Downloads: 1Download Full Article: Click Here
How to cite this article:
Marco Bellini, Elena García-Ramos.
Common construction defects in urban buildings: Findings from a field-based defect investigation research. Int J Surv Struct Eng 2026;7(1):13-15. DOI:
10.22271/2707840X.2026.v7.i1a.53