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Infrastructure Lifecycle Management
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Infrastructure Lifecycle Management (ILM) is a term coined by the real estate sector. It covers the management of all core processes around planning, construction, operation, maintenance and commercialization of buildings or property. The life cycle of a real estate property starts with the planning and realization phase, carries on with the commercial usage and facility management and is finalized by the demolition, dismantling or conversion of the property.
![]() | This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (September 2010) |
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References
- David G. Cotts (1998). The Facility Management Handbook, AMACOM.
- Robert C. Kyle, Floyd M. Baird, Marie S. Spodek (1999). Property Management, Dearborn Real Estate Education.
- W. Ronald Hudson, Ralph Haas, Waheed Uddin (1997). Infrastructure Management: Integrating Design, Construction, Maintenance, Rehabilitation and Renovation, McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing.
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