Specifications include, but are not limited to: The utility master plan should include, but not limited to, the following: A. Identify and assess the age, condition and capacity of existing utilities, and infrastructure, including central plant system(s) in relation to existing buildings and loads. This assessment should include at a minimum: location, type, size, building served, remaining/spare capacities, condition with remaining useful life, available capacities from provider, known utility issues, etc. The level of effort required by the consultant should be commensurate with the accuracy needed for a given situation. B. Evaluate capacity upgrades alternatives. This should include computer modeling, calculations, and estimations from industry guideline and standard practices while reflecting, when possible, conditions unique to campus and utilize empirical evidence from utilities and central plant operational history. C. Develop future utility needs based on new campus master plan and coordinate both plans as necessary to accommodate expected growth in students and anticipated programs. D. Develop a phased implementation plan including a phase-out process for obsolete equipment and/or methodology that is well coordinated with the implementation of the new campus master and provides for minimal disruption to campus operations. E. Develop documentation that outlines the process, existing conditions and campus constraints, decisions and reasoning that occurred throughout the process, recommendations, major projects and implementation strategies, conceptual diagrams, and any other narratives, illustrations that convey the intention of the plan. Any calculations, surveys, modeling, and lifecycle costs should also be included.