System Turnover Plan definition

System Turnover Plan means an overall plan that provides for the activities, roles, responsibilities, and procedures for system completion, punchlist, checkout and commissioning to allow for a smooth incremental transfer of jurisdictional control from construction to operations on a system or multi-system basis. The Commissioning Agent writes and updates the plan as design progresses.

Examples of System Turnover Plan in a sentence

  • The Contractor shall maintain the System Turnover Plan in the project document management system.

  • Upon the sooner of a date specified in a notice of termination from either party, or within 90 days of Contract expiration, the Contractor shall: Deliverable 1 - Develop a System Turnover Plan at no additional cost to the State.

  • The Contractor shall write and submit a System Turnover Plan for the Department to review and approve, at no additional cost to the Department.

Related to System Turnover Plan

  • Turnover Plan means the written plan developed by Contractor, approved by HHSC, and to be employed when the Work described in the Contract transfers to HHSC, or its designee, from the Contractor.

  • System prototype means a model of a product or technology that can demonstrate performance in an operational environment;

  • Operating Plan means a plan adopted or amended under this section for the development, redevelopment, maintenance, operation and promotion of a business improvement district, including all of the following:

  • Standard Turnover means the turnover achieved between the date of commencement of your business and the date of the damage, converted to the selected indemnity period.

  • System Downtime means any interruption of access to the Hosting Web Site as measured by the System Availability Monitoring Mechanism. System Downtime specifically excludes: (a) any Scheduled Downtime; (b) inability to access the System resulting from failure in the internet backbone or networks not directly managed by NCR Voyix or its subcontractors or agents; (c) erroneous System monitoring, in which NCR Voyix establishes that the incorrect reporting of the inability to access the System was due to failure in the monitoring mechanism rather than a failure in the System; (d) an Extreme Service Interruption Event; or (e) any System Downtime caused by Customer.