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Designing and constructing an oil and gas office is not just about putting up a building, it is about creating a safe, resilient, and highly functional operational hub that can support one of the most demanding industries in the world. This is where an EPCC (Engineering, Procurement, Construction & Commissioning) approach becomes critical. It's a multidisciplinary challenge that goes far beyond architecture. It is about engineering confidence into every detail from structural integrity to human comfort.
With a strong EPCC framework, organisations can deliver facilities that are not only durable and efficient, but also aligned with the highest safety standards in the industry.
1. WHY EPCC?
An EPCC model ensures end-to-end accountability from concept design to final commissioning. In oil and gas environments, where risks are high and margins for error are low, EPCC helps to:
1.1 Incorporate Safety into Design From Day 1 - This is not a slogan. It is a structured process embedded in engineering workflows.
Key Practices : Hazard Identification and Risk Studies,
Conduct HAZID (Hazard Identification) during concept stage
Follow with HAZOP (Hazard and Operability Study) for detailed design
Include QRA (Quantitative Risk Assessment) for facilities near process plants
Example: If the office is within a refinery perimeter, QRA may dictate:
Minimum safe separation distance (e.g. 150–300 m from hydrocarbon units)
Orientation of building away from potential blast sources
b. Blast-Resistant and Fire-Safe Design - Design in accordance with relevant API and ISO Standards/Guidelines
Apply blast load calculations (e.g. 0.3 - 1.0 bar overpressure depending on risk study)
Use:
Reinforced concrete shear walls,
Laminated, blast-rated glazing,
Progressive collapse-resistant framing
Example : A control office near a gas processing plant may require:
2-hour fire-rated walls
Overpressure-resistant doors
No direct line-of-sight to high-risk equipment
c. Safe Layout and Egress Planning
Minimum 2 means of escape per occupied zone,
Travel distance limits (typically < 30–45 m depending on code)
Segregate : Admin areas, control rooms and Hazard interface zones
1.2 Procurement to Meet Industry Specs
Procurement in oil and gas is engineering-driven, not price-driven.
Key Controls
a. Approved Vendor List (AVL) & Prequalification
Vendors must comply with: ISO 9001 (Quality) ISO 45001 (Safety)
Conduct technical bid evaluation (TBE) before commercial review
b. Material Certification & Traceability
Require: Mill certificates (EN 10204 3.1) Material Test Certificates (MTC)
Full traceability from manufacturer to installation
Example: Structural steel for office:
Meet ASTM A572/BS EN standards
Coating: minimum C5-M corrosion protection for coastal facilities
c. Hazardous Area Equipment Compliance
Use only certified equipment: ATEX/IECEx rated
Especially for: Lighting fixtures HVAC systems Electrical panels near classified zones
d. Construction Quality and Compliance
Execution is where most failures occur even with good design.
Key Practices
a. Inspection & Test Plans (ITP)
Define hold points and witness points
Typical checks: Reinforcement inspection before concreting Concrete cube strength testing (7 & 28 days) Coating thickness (DFT measurement)
b. Quality Assurance/Quality Control (QA/QC)
Follow project-specific Project Quality Plan (PQP)
Maintain: Method Statements Work Inspection Requests (WIR) Non-Conformance Reports (NCR)
Example: Concrete works:
Ensure proper vibration (avoid honeycombing)
Cover blocks to maintain durability (e.g. 40–50 mm in aggressive environments)
c. Environmental & Site Compliance
Dust, noise, and waste management
Silt traps and drainage control (especially relevant in Malaysia’s heavy rainfall)
1.3 Validation and Commissioning
Commissioning is not just testing, it is proving operational readiness.
Process
Example: Control room scenario:
Loss of power = UPS supports systems for 30 mins
Generator kicks in within 10–15 seconds
No facility is complete without thorough commissioning, it's the final safety gate. In EPCC, this phase ensures:
All systems operate as intended
Safety systems are tested under real conditions
Personnel are trained for operations and emergency response
It is the final assurance that the office is not only built well but is ready to perform safely from day one.
d. Operational Readiness
SOPs (Standard Operating Procedures)
Emergency Response Plan (ERP)
Training and Competency assessment
Examples
For a remote upstream operations office:
These factors reduce fragmentation and aligns all stakeholders under a single responsibility framework crucial for safety and performance.
2.0 SAFETY AND DURABILITY
Oil and gas offices especially those located near processing plants, refineries, or offshore bases must withstand harsh environments:
2.1 Corrosive Atmospheres (Salt, Chemicals, Hydrocarbons)
Corrosion is not cosmetic, it is a structural and safety risk.
Exposure
Coastal/offshore salt-laden air (chlorides)
Acidic gases (H₂S, CO₂ = sour service)
Hydrocarbon vapours and chemical splashes
Industrial pollutants (SOx, NOx)
2.2 Design
a. Material Selection
Structural steel: Use corrosion-resistant grades or apply protective systems
Reinforced concrete: Low permeability mix (w/c ratio ≤ 0.40) Additives: silica fume, fly ash Increase cover (50–75 mm in severe exposure zones)
b. Protective Coating Systems
References - NACE International/ISO 12944
Typical system for C5-M (marine, high corrosion): Zinc-rich primer ეპoxy intermediate coat - Polyurethane topcoat
Example: External steel staircase near a coastal LNG plant:
Design life: 15–25 years coating durability
DFT (Dry Film Thickness): ~250–350 microns total
c. Cathodic Protection (CP)
For buried or submerged components: Sacrificial anode systems Impressed current systems
d. Detailing Matters
Avoid water traps and crevices
Provide drainage holes
Seal joints properly
Most corrosion failures occur at connections, bolts, and interfaces not main members.
2.3 High Temperatures and Potential Fire Exposure
In oil and gas, fire is not hypothetical, it is a design load case.
Risk
Pool fires (liquid hydrocarbons)
Jet fires (pressurized releases)
Flash fires / explosions
2.4 Design (Fire)
a. Fire Resistance Ratings (FRR)
Structural elements: Minimum 1–2 hours fire rating
Use: Fireproofing (cementitious/intumescent coatings) Concrete encasement
b. Passive Fire Protection (PFP)
Apply to: Structural steel Critical supports
Designed per American Petroleum Institute and industry fire curves
Example: Steel column near process unit:
Intumescent coating thickness designed for 2-hour protection at ~1000°C
c. Active Fire Protection Systems
Fire detection: Smoke, heat, flame detectors
Suppression: Sprinklers Deluge systems Foam systems (for hydrocarbon fires)
d. Thermal Expansion Consideration
Provide: Expansion joints Sliding supports
Prevent: Structural distortion Cracking in concrete
e. HVAC and Smoke Control
Pressurised escape routes
Smoke extraction systems
Fire dampers in ducting
3.0 VIBRATIONS AND OPERATIONAL LOADS
Often overlooked in office design but critical near operating facilities.
3.1 Sources
Rotating equipment (compressors, turbines),
Heavy vehicle movement,
Piping-induced vibration,
Nearby blasting or drilling activities
3.2 Design (Vibrations)
a. Structural Design for Dynamic Loads
Perform: Vibration analysis Modal analysis (natural frequency checks)
Goal: Avoid resonance between structure and equipment frequency.
b. Isolation Systems
Use: Vibration isolators (spring / rubber mounts) Floating floors for control rooms
Example: Control room near compressor station:
Floor isolation reduces vibration transmission = protects sensitive instruments
c. Equipment Foundation Design
Separate foundations for: Heavy rotating equipment Office structure
Use inertia blocks: Mass = 3–5× machine weight
d. Human Comfort Criteria
Follow limits (e.g. ISO vibration standards): office spaces require very low vibration thresholds
Even when structurally safe, excessive vibration leads to:
Staff fatigue
Reduced concentration
Equipment malfunction
e. Examples :
For an onshore gas processing facility office:
Corrosion Control C5-M coating system Stainless steel fixtures in exposed areas
Fire Protection 2-hour fire-rated structure Intumescent coating on steel Foam suppression system nearby
Vibration Mitigation Control room on isolated slab Equipment on separate foundations
These three factors, corrosion, heat, and vibration, do not act independently.
They compound each other:
Heat accelerates corrosion
Vibration damages protective coatings
Corrosion weakens fire resistance
Good engineering anticipates this interaction. Great EPCC execution designs for it from the start.
This all demands robust structural systems, high-grade materials, blast-resistant design considerations, and strict adherence to international standards such as API and ISO. Fire-rated assemblies, explosion-proof fittings, and well-planned evacuation routes are not optional, they are baseline requirements.
4.0 HIGH PERFORMANCE WORKSPACE
While safety is paramount, the human factor cannot be ignored. Today’s oil and gas offices are evolving into smart, ergonomic, and collaborative environments:
4.1 Digital Control Rooms with Real-Time Monitoring
4.2 Design Objectives
Real-time visibility of plant operations
Early anomaly detection
Centralised decision-making
High operator reliability under stress
4.3 Guidelines
a. Integrated SCADA/DCS Systems
Deploy SCADA system and Distributed Control System (DCS) integration
Ensure: Redundant communication networks (dual fibre / ring topology) Real-time data latency < 1–2 seconds for critical parameters
b. Control Room Ergonomics
Follow ISO 11064 (Control Room Design)
Requirements: Operator consoles with adjustable sight lines Maximum screen viewing angle ≤ 30° Acoustic control (≤ 55 dB ambient noise)
c. Visualization
Large-format video walls (4K/8K)
Alarm prioritisation: Red = safety critical Amber = operational warning Green = normal
Example : In a gas processing facility:
Operators monitor: Pressure drop in pipelines. Compressor vibration Gas leak detection sensors
System automatically triggers: Emergency shutdown (ESD) if thresholds exceeded
4.2 Flexible Workspace
Modern oil & gas offices are shifting from static layouts to adaptive, mission-based environments.
4.3 Design (Workspace)
a. Activity-Based Working (ABW)
Spaces designed by function, not hierarchy:
Engineering zone (design + modelling)
Data analytics zone
Field coordination zone
Collaboration hubs
b. Modular Workspace Design
Movable partitions
Plug-and-play power/data floors
Hot-desking systems
c. Digital Infra
High-speed secure networks (minimum 1–10 Gbps backbone)
Secure VPN access for field engineers
Cloud-based collaboration platforms
d. Example Layout
Engineers: 3D modelling stations (BIM/CAD workstations)
Analysts: dual-screen data dashboards
Field teams: rugged tablets + docking stations for report uploads
e. Benefit
Reduces idle space by 20–40%
Improves cross-discipline collaboration speed
5.0 INTEGRATION OF IOT AND DATA FOR PREDICTIVE MAINTENANCE
This is where oil & gas offices evolve into data-driven operational intelligence centres.
Key Technologies
a. Industrial IoT (IIoT) Layer
Sensors on: Pumps Compressors HVAC systems Electrical switchgear
Connected through Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT)
b. Data Pipeline Architecture
Typical flow:
c. Predictive Analystics
Use:
Machine learning models for failure prediction
Trend analysis (vibration, temperature, pressure)
d. Guidelines
Sampling frequency: Critical equipment: 1–10 Hz
Data redundancy: Minimum dual sensor validation
Storage: Time-series database (historical and real-time)
Example :
A compressor shows:
Increasing vibration trend over 3 weeks
AI model predicts bearing failure in 10–14 days
Outcome:
Maintenance scheduled during planned shutdown
Avoids unplanned outage (cost saving: high impact)
e. Engineering Value
Reduces downtime by 20–50%
Extends asset life cycle
Enables condition-based maintenance (CBM)
6.0 WELLNESS-FOCUSED DESIGN FOR HIGH STRESS ENVIRONMENT
Oil annd gas decision environments are high pressure, high consequence spaces.
a. Design (High-Stress Environment)
Reduce cognitive fatigue
Improve decision accuracy
Enhance mental resilience
b. Guidelines
i) Lighting
Use circadian lighting systems: 300–500 lux for focus work Tunable white light (4000K–6500K range)
Minimise glare on screens (< 19% UGR rating)
ii) Acoustic
Sound zoning: Silent zones (≤ 40 dB) Collaboration zones (≤ 55 dB)
Acoustic panels with NRC ≥ 0.8
iii) Thermal
Maintain: 22–24°C optimal range Humidity 40–60%
c. Biophilic Design
Natural elements: Indoor greenery. Natural ventilation zones where safe visual access to daylight
d. Fatigue Reduction Layout
Short walking distances between key functions
Breakout zones every 30–50 meters
Dedicated decompression spaces
Example : In a 24/7 operations office:
Operators rotate every 2–3 hours
Rest zones include: Low-light relaxation pods quiet recovery rooms
Result: Reduced decision fatigue Improved alertness during critical shifts
A well-designed office improves decision-making speed, reduces human error, and enhances overall productivity.
5.0 MODULAR SOLUTIONS FOR REMOTE/FAST TRACK PROJECTS
Many oil and gas projects are located in remote or logistically challenging areas. Modular construction has become a game changer.
Modular construction is not just a construction method, it is a controlled manufacturing approach applied to building systems, especially valuable in oil & gas where time, safety, and quality consistency are critical.
5.1 Prefabricated Units Reduce On-Site Construction Risks
On-site construction in oil and gas environments often involves:
Live plant interfaces
Restricted access zones
Hazardous operations nearby
Weather exposure
Simultaneous operations (SIMOPS)
Modularisation shifts high-risk work to a controlled fabrication environment.
5.2 Guidelines
a. Maximum Offsite Fabrication Strategy
Target 60–90% prefabrication for: Office modules Control rooms Electrical rooms (MCC, switchgear rooms) HVAC skids
b. SIMOPS Risk Reduction
Minimise hot works on site
Reduce lifting operations in congested plant areas
Limit workforce exposure in hazardous zones
c. Standardised Lifting and Transport Design
Design modules based on: ISO container dimensions (w/a) Lifting points certified for offshore/onshore lifting
Structural design must include: Temporary transport loads Crane lifting load factors (dynamic amplification)
Example : Instead of constructing a control building near a live refinery:
Entire control room is fabricated in yard
Tested for: Electrical systems HVAC balancing Fire alarm integration
Delivered and installed via heavy lift crane in 1–2 days
5.3 Faster Deployment Timelines
Time is a critical cost factor in oil & gas projects.
Modular systems allow parallel execution:
Site works proceed while modules are fabricated
Commissioning preparation starts in factory phase
5.4 Guidelines
a. Parallel Engineering & Construction (Fast-Track EPCC)
Engineering freeze early (to avoid rework),
Offsite fabrication starts at 30–40% design completion,
Site foundation works proceed simultaneously
b. Plug andPlay
Pre-installed: Electrical cabling Data networks (fiber backbone) Fire protection piping HVAC ducting
d. Interface Management
Critical success factor:
Define module-to-site interface control documents (ICDs)
Ensure mechanical, electrical, and structural interfaces are standardized
Example : Timeline Comparison
6.0 IMPROVED QC IN FACTORY SETTINGS
Factory fabrication provides a controlled engineering environment, unlike unpredictable site conditions.
6.1 Guidelines
a. Factory Acceptance Test (FAT)
Before shipment:
Electrical system energisation tests
HVAC performance validation
Fire alarm system simulation
Network connectivity testing
b. Controlled Environmental Conditions
Temperature-controlled welding areas
Moisture-controlled curing of concrete modules
Dust-free electrical panel assembly zones
c. Standardised QA/QC, (and Safety and Environment)
ISO 9001 quality based systems (generic cross-reference to ISO 45001 and ISO 14001 or Intergrated Management Systems (IMS))
Welding procedures qualified to ASME standards
Traceability of materials via batch/heat numbers
d. Dimensional Accuracy Control
Laser scanning / 3D metrology checks
Tolerance control: Steel structure ±2–3 mm typical Module alignment verified before dispatch
Example : A prefabricated electrical control room:
Fully wired in factory
Tested under simulated load conditions
Delivered with: Fully certified MCC panels Pre-configured SCADA interfaces Result:
Zero on-site rewiring required
Reduced commissioning time by ~40%
7.0 SCALABILITY FOR FUTURE EXPLANSION
Oil and gas facilities must adapt to:
Production increases
New digital systems
Workforce expansion
Regulatory changes
Modular design enables “building block” scalability.
7.1 Guidelines
a. Modular Grid-Based Design
Use structural grid system (e.g. 6m x 6m or 3m x 6m modules)
Allows: Horizontal expansion (add modules side-by-side). Vertical expansion (stacking where feasible)
b. Pre-Designed Expansion Interfaces
Spare duct routes
Reserved electrical capacity (e.g. 20–30% future load)
Blank panel provisions for additional systems
c. Utility Oversizing Strategy
HVAC systems designed with expansion margin
Electrical switchgear with spare feeders
Network systems with spare fiber cores
Example :
Initial setup: 20-person control office module
Future expansion: Scaled to 60-person operation by: Adding 2 additional modules Plugging into existing utility backbone No structural modification required
CONCLUSION
Building an oil and gas office is a multidisciplinary challenge that goes far beyond architecture. It is about engineering confidence into every detail from structural integrity to human comfort. With a strong EPCC framework, organisations can deliver facilities that are not only durable and efficient, but also aligned with the highest safety standards in the industry.

