Who Is Actually Managing Your Condo Project

Most condo projects run with a dangerous assumption that someone is managing the project, when in reality no one is. This post explains the project management gap, why it keeps happening, and why condo projects fail when no one owns the outcome from start to finish.

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Written By Salim Dharssi

January 23, 2026

In a brief conversation with a condo board director, I asked what sounded like a simple question about their upcoming garage refurbishment:

“Who is managing the project?”

The answer came back immediately.

“The engineer.”

Minutes later we were talking about a related issue: Where are residents going to park while the only garage is out of service?

That is the moment my alarm went off.

The engineer was not planning resident parking? The board and manager were left to figure out the resident parking issue.

Clearly, no one stakeholder was responsible for the overall impact of the project. I.e., there was no project manager.

That is the real issue in many condo projects: Everyone assumes someone is managing the project. Often, no one is.

The Hidden Assumption In Most Condo Projects

Condo projects involve a tangle of people, contracts, and expectations. In that complexity, a very expensive assumption shows up: Someone must be in charge of the whole thing.

Boards assume the condo manager, engineer or general contractor is managing it. Managers assume the engineer or general contractor is managing it. Consultants assume they are protecting technical interests, not leading the whole project.

The result is that projects start to run, but it is not actually being managed.

The Stakeholders And What They Really Care About

Here is what each stakeholder group is really focused on.

Owners

Owners want:

  • Safe, clean, well-maintained buildings
  • Minimal disruption to their lives
  • Predictable and reasonable condo fees

Their questions are practical and immediate: Can I park conveniently? Will I sleep through jackhammering? Is it safe for my kids?

Board Of Directors

Board members are volunteers pulled from every kind of background. Many:

  • Safe, clean, well-maintained buildings
  • Minimal disruption to their lives
  • Predictable and reasonable condo fees

They are the project sponsor whether they like it or not. If something goes wrong, the finger points to them.

Condo Manager / Property Manager

Property managers are in the middle of everything. They are heavily involved in

  • Owner communication
  • Compliance and regulatory obligations
  • Day to day operational impacts
  • Cash flow and reserve fund considerations

They want satisfied board directors and owners, and their management contract renewed.

But here’s an important reality: Property management is not project management.

Trades And General Contractors

Their focus is very clear:

  • Perform the work in their contract
  • Stay within scope as they understand it

They are not responsible for resident experience, board politics, or long-term risk. They perform what they were hired to perform.

Consulting Architects And Engineers

Consultants are engaged to protect the condo from technical and construction risk. They:

  • Perform condition assessments
  • Prepare or review designs and specifications
  • Monitor progress
  • Verify quality and completeness
  • Identify and track deficiencies

This is technical oversight or contract monitoring. It is not the same as owning the entire project outcome.

Legal Counsel

Lawyers step in to:

  • Review contracts
  • Advise on risk and liabilities
  • Help protect the board and corporation

They appear at key moments, but they do not run the project.

Put simply, everyone has a role, but no one by default owns the whole picture.

What Project Management Actually Is

Project management is not:

  • Writing a spec
  • Inspecting work
  • Answering owner emails
  • Watching the contractor

Project management is the practice of taking the condo corporation’s goals and making sure every part of the project serves those goals from start to finish.

That includes:

  • Defining the real problem
  • Clarifying what success looks like
  • Coordinating the timing and sequence of work
  • Managing risk and disruption
  • Keeping stakeholders aligned and informed
  • Making sure the finished result actually works for the people who live and work in the building

If no one is doing that, you do not have a managed project. You have a construction event.

The Project Lifecycle And Where Things Break

Most vendors only show up in the middle of the story. Project management starts earlier and ends later.

Here is the lifecycle of a project:

  1. Define the problem - What are we trying to fix. If this is vague, projects solve the wrong problem or chase symptoms.
  2. Clarify the goal - What does success look like? Without a clearly documented goal, scope creeps and everyone argues about what was promised.
  3. Build the business case - What will it cost, what are the benefits, what are the tradeoffs. If no one owns the business case, the board gets surprised by total cost, timing, or funding constraints.
  4. Approval - The board confirms funding and authorizes the project. If this is rushed, the board commits without understanding risk, disruption, or options.
  5. Create the plan - Schedule access, communications, and stakeholder impacts. If no one owns this, residents are blindsided, operations are disrupted, and managers scramble.
  6. Build the solution - Vendors do the work. Without strong coordination, trades collide, delays multiply, and blame starts flying.
  7. Acceptance - The board or its representative confirms that the work matches what was approved and contracted. If this is weak, deficiencies linger and the corporation accepts problems it will pay for later.
  8. Launch and transition - Systems are commissioned, staff are trained, residents learn how to use the new or changed facilities. If no one plans this, the building gets a project that people do not understand or use properly.
  9. Measure success - Did it actually solve the original problem? Is the building better off? If this never happens, the same mistakes repeat on the next project.
  10. Project close - Final payments, claims, liens, documentation, and handover. If this is sloppy, legal and financial risk stays open for months or years.

Most individual board directors only focus on items 3 to 7. Most vendors only truly care about 6 and part of 7. Project management has to span all of it.

Contract Management, Technical Oversight, And Real Project Management

These terms get tossed around as if they are interchangeable. They are not.

Contract management starts after the contract is signed. It focuses on scope changes, payment terms, and disputes. Contract management is often handled by property managers or consultants. It's important but narrow. It protects the agreement, not the overall outcome.

Contract monitoring (or technical oversight) involves checking whether the work matches the technical scope and quality. It's typically done by consultants or site representatives. Contract monitoring is important, but it is focused on compliance, not the lived experience of owners or the full risk picture.

Project management - The project manager owns the outcome, not just the paperwork. The project manager represents the sponsors interests from start to finish. They coordinate with vendors, consultants, legal, and internal stakeholders. The project manager manages risk, disruption, and communication.

If the only things you have are contract management and technical oversight, you are missing project leadership.

That gap is where trouble lives.

The Ownership Gap And Why It Hurts Boards

When no one owns the whole picture, basic but critical questions go unanswered:

  • When no one owns the whole picture, basic but critical questions go unanswered
  • Who is planning for resident disruption and communication
  • Who is coordinating multiple vendors so they are not in each others way
  • Who is thinking about safety beyond the construction area
  • Who is anticipating complaints, claims, or reputational risk
  • Who is responsible for saying no when someone tries to push risk back onto the condo

If the answer is unclear, here is what actually happens: the board or manager become the project manager by default without the tools, time, or mandate to do the job.

That is why boards and managers end up fielding angry emails at midnight, sweating over finances when projects run over budget, arguing with contractors about who agreed to what and taking heat for problems they assumed someone else was managing.

The risk does not vanish. It just lands on the people with the least capacity to handle it.

Why This Keeps Happening

This pattern repeats in condo projects for predictable reasons:

  • The title project manager is used by different people to mean completely different things
  • Each stakeholder is hired to represent their own slice of the puzzle, not the whole picture
  • Reserve fund studies often budget for technical consultants and construction, but not for dedicated project management
  • Boards are under pressure to control fees, so they cut what they cannot easily see or explain

So the assumption quietly appears: someone must be handling that.

Sometimes, no one is.

A Simple Test For Your Next Project

Before your next major or complex project, ask one blunt question in a board or planning meeting: “Who owns this project from the moment we decide to explore it until the moment we close it out and measure whether it worked?”

If the answer is fuzzy, you already have a risk problem.

For larger or more complex condo projects:

  • Contract management alone is not enough
  • Technical oversight is not the same thing as project leadership
  • Owner objectives will not manage themselves

Whether you use a dedicated external project manager, a specialized firm, or a clearly defined internal role, somebody must be accountable for the outcome from beginning to end.

If no one is clearly managing the project, the project is unmanaged. Unmanaged projects cost boards money, reputation, and a lot of unnecessary pain.

Request a Demo

January 22, 2026

In a brief conversation with a condo board director, I asked what sounded like a simple question about their upcoming garage refurbishment:

“Who is managing the project?”

The answer came back immediately.

“The engineer.”

Minutes later we were talking about a related issue: Where are residents going to park while the only garage is out of service?

That is the moment my alarm went off.

The engineer was not planning resident parking? The board and manager were left to figure out the resident parking issue.

Clearly, no one stakeholder was responsible for the overall impact of the project. I.e., there was no project manager.

That is the real issue in many condo projects: Everyone assumes someone is managing the project. Often, no one is.

The Hidden Assumption In Most Condo Projects

Condo projects involve a tangle of people, contracts, and expectations. In that complexity, a very expensive assumption shows up: Someone must be in charge of the whole thing.

Boards assume the condo manager, engineer or general contractor is managing it. Managers assume the engineer or general contractor is managing it. Consultants assume they are protecting technical interests, not leading the whole project.

The result is that projects start to run, but it is not actually being managed.

The Stakeholders And What They Really Care About

Here is what each stakeholder group is really focused on.

Owners

Owners want:

  • Safe, clean, well-maintained buildings
  • Minimal disruption to their lives
  • Predictable and reasonable condo fees

Their questions are practical and immediate: Can I park conveniently? Will I sleep through jackhammering? Is it safe for my kids?

Board Of Directors

Board members are volunteers pulled from every kind of background. Many:

  • Safe, clean, well-maintained buildings
  • Minimal disruption to their lives
  • Predictable and reasonable condo fees

They are the project sponsor whether they like it or not. If something goes wrong, the finger points to them.

Condo Manager / Property Manager

Property managers are in the middle of everything. They are heavily involved in

  • Owner communication
  • Compliance and regulatory obligations
  • Day to day operational impacts
  • Cash flow and reserve fund considerations

They want satisfied board directors and owners, and their management contract renewed.

But here’s an important reality: Property management is not project management.

Trades And General Contractors

Their focus is very clear:

  • Perform the work in their contract
  • Stay within scope as they understand it

They are not responsible for resident experience, board politics, or long-term risk. They perform what they were hired to perform.

Consulting Architects And Engineers

Consultants are engaged to protect the condo from technical and construction risk. They:

  • Perform condition assessments
  • Prepare or review designs and specifications
  • Monitor progress
  • Verify quality and completeness
  • Identify and track deficiencies

This is technical oversight or contract monitoring. It is not the same as owning the entire project outcome.

Legal Counsel

Lawyers step in to:

  • Review contracts
  • Advise on risk and liabilities
  • Help protect the board and corporation

They appear at key moments, but they do not run the project.

Put simply, everyone has a role, but no one by default owns the whole picture.

What Project Management Actually Is

Project management is not:

  • Writing a spec
  • Inspecting work
  • Answering owner emails
  • Watching the contractor

Project management is the practice of taking the condo corporation’s goals and making sure every part of the project serves those goals from start to finish.

That includes:

  • Defining the real problem
  • Clarifying what success looks like
  • Coordinating the timing and sequence of work
  • Managing risk and disruption
  • Keeping stakeholders aligned and informed
  • Making sure the finished result actually works for the people who live and work in the building

If no one is doing that, you do not have a managed project. You have a construction event.

The Project Lifecycle And Where Things Break

Most vendors only show up in the middle of the story. Project management starts earlier and ends later.

Here is the lifecycle of a project:

  1. Define the problem - What are we trying to fix. If this is vague, projects solve the wrong problem or chase symptoms.
  2. Clarify the goal - What does success look like? Without a clearly documented goal, scope creeps and everyone argues about what was promised.
  3. Build the business case - What will it cost, what are the benefits, what are the tradeoffs. If no one owns the business case, the board gets surprised by total cost, timing, or funding constraints.
  4. Approval - The board confirms funding and authorizes the project. If this is rushed, the board commits without understanding risk, disruption, or options.
  5. Create the plan - Schedule access, communications, and stakeholder impacts. If no one owns this, residents are blindsided, operations are disrupted, and managers scramble.
  6. Build the solution - Vendors do the work. Without strong coordination, trades collide, delays multiply, and blame starts flying.
  7. Acceptance - The board or its representative confirms that the work matches what was approved and contracted. If this is weak, deficiencies linger and the corporation accepts problems it will pay for later.
  8. Launch and transition - Systems are commissioned, staff are trained, residents learn how to use the new or changed facilities. If no one plans this, the building gets a project that people do not understand or use properly.
  9. Measure success - Did it actually solve the original problem? Is the building better off? If this never happens, the same mistakes repeat on the next project.
  10. Project close - Final payments, claims, liens, documentation, and handover. If this is sloppy, legal and financial risk stays open for months or years.

Most individual board directors only focus on items 3 to 7. Most vendors only truly care about 6 and part of 7. Project management has to span all of it.

Contract Management, Technical Oversight, And Real Project Management

These terms get tossed around as if they are interchangeable. They are not.

Contract management starts after the contract is signed. It focuses on scope changes, payment terms, and disputes. Contract management is often handled by property managers or consultants. It's important but narrow. It protects the agreement, not the overall outcome.

Contract monitoring (or technical oversight) involves checking whether the work matches the technical scope and quality. It's typically done by consultants or site representatives. Contract monitoring is important, but it is focused on compliance, not the lived experience of owners or the full risk picture.

Project management - The project manager owns the outcome, not just the paperwork. The project manager represents the sponsors interests from start to finish. They coordinate with vendors, consultants, legal, and internal stakeholders. The project manager manages risk, disruption, and communication.

If the only things you have are contract management and technical oversight, you are missing project leadership.

That gap is where trouble lives.

The Ownership Gap And Why It Hurts Boards

When no one owns the whole picture, basic but critical questions go unanswered:

  • When no one owns the whole picture, basic but critical questions go unanswered
  • Who is planning for resident disruption and communication
  • Who is coordinating multiple vendors so they are not in each others way
  • Who is thinking about safety beyond the construction area
  • Who is anticipating complaints, claims, or reputational risk
  • Who is responsible for saying no when someone tries to push risk back onto the condo

If the answer is unclear, here is what actually happens: the board or manager become the project manager by default without the tools, time, or mandate to do the job.

That is why boards and managers end up fielding angry emails at midnight, sweating over finances when projects run over budget, arguing with contractors about who agreed to what and taking heat for problems they assumed someone else was managing.

The risk does not vanish. It just lands on the people with the least capacity to handle it.

Why This Keeps Happening

This pattern repeats in condo projects for predictable reasons:

  • The title project manager is used by different people to mean completely different things
  • Each stakeholder is hired to represent their own slice of the puzzle, not the whole picture
  • Reserve fund studies often budget for technical consultants and construction, but not for dedicated project management
  • Boards are under pressure to control fees, so they cut what they cannot easily see or explain

So the assumption quietly appears: someone must be handling that.

Sometimes, no one is.

A Simple Test For Your Next Project

Before your next major or complex project, ask one blunt question in a board or planning meeting: “Who owns this project from the moment we decide to explore it until the moment we close it out and measure whether it worked?”

If the answer is fuzzy, you already have a risk problem.

For larger or more complex condo projects:

  • Contract management alone is not enough
  • Technical oversight is not the same thing as project leadership
  • Owner objectives will not manage themselves

Whether you use a dedicated external project manager, a specialized firm, or a clearly defined internal role, somebody must be accountable for the outcome from beginning to end.

If no one is clearly managing the project, the project is unmanaged. Unmanaged projects cost boards money, reputation, and a lot of unnecessary pain.

Request a Demo

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