Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART V— - ACQUISITION › Subpart Subpart B— - Acquisition Planning › Chapter CHAPTER 223— - OTHER PROVISIONS RELATING TO PLANNING AND SOLICITATION GENERALLY › § 3241
Agencies must use a two-phase process when they hire someone to both design and build a public building or project, unless they use the usual design‑bid‑build method or another allowed method. A contracting officer must decide to use the two‑phase way when they expect at least three offers, the design work is needed before a bidder can give a price, bidders will spend a lot to prepare offers, and the officer has looked at things like how clear the project is, time limits, likely contractor skill, whether the project fits this process, the agency’s ability to run the process, and any other agency rules. First, the agency puts out a clear scope of work (it can hire architects or engineers to help). In phase one, firms send proposals that show their technical plan and qualifications but do not include detailed designs or prices. The solicitation must list the non‑cost evaluation factors (for example, experience, ability to perform, and past performance) and how important they are. The agency rates phase‑one offers and picks the top number of firms named in the solicitation. Those firms go to phase two and submit technical proposals (design concepts or solutions) plus price information. The agency evaluates the technical and price parts separately and then awards the contract under existing procurement rules. The solicitation must say the maximum number of firms chosen for phase two. If the contract is over $4,000,000, that maximum normally cannot be more than 5 unless it is an IDIQ design‑build contract or a senior official approves and the contracting officer documents why more than 5 is needed. The Federal Acquisition Regulation will give government‑wide guidance on when to use this process and how to pick contractors. For military construction, each Secretary may use funds available under section 2807(a) or section 18233(e) to speed up design before a project is authorized or construction funds are provided. If the contract is ended for convenience before construction money is available, U.S. liability is limited to the amount tied to the final design. From March 1, 2028, and each year through March 1, 2033, the Secretary of Defense must report to Congress on each use of these authorities, including project details, award date and costs, schedule vs. actual dates, any savings or efficiencies, risk management benefits, and challenges and fixes. A Secretary may also use a single‑phase progressive design‑build option for military projects: award by qualifications, then work with the contractor to refine scope and design and later negotiate a guaranteed maximum price; rules, reporting, and funding rules for this option match the rules above.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 3241
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73