🛠️ RTT Facilities — City Implementation Guide

From Framework to Practice

This guide provides city leadership and staff with a clear, phased approach to implementing RTT Facilities.

It is designed for City Managers, Department Directors, Infrastructure Leads, and Implementation Teams.

RTT Facilities is intentionally modular — cities adopt it progressively, not all at once.


1. Implementation Philosophy#

RTT Facilities is not a “big bang” rollout.

Implementation is:

  • Incremental
  • Non‑disruptive
  • Aligned with existing staff and processes
  • Scalable to city size and readiness

Cities retain control at every step.


2. Phase 1 — Orientation & Alignment#

Objective: Establish shared understanding and leadership alignment.

Key Actions#

  • Brief executive leadership
  • Identify implementation sponsor
  • Confirm participating departments
  • Align on goals and scope

Outcomes#

  • Leadership buy‑in
  • Clear ownership
  • Defined starting point

3. Phase 2 — Corridor Identification#

Objective: Shift from asset‑by‑asset thinking to spatial risk awareness.

Key Actions#

  • Identify initial infrastructure corridors
  • Focus on high‑impact or high‑visibility areas
  • Document corridor boundaries and dependencies

Outcomes#

  • Shared spatial risk map
  • Cross‑department visibility
  • Early coordination benefits

4. Phase 3 — Baseline Risk Scoring#

Objective: Establish a defensible risk baseline.

Key Actions#

  • Apply drift, harmonics, and propagation lenses
  • Use existing data where available
  • Document assumptions and gaps

Outcomes#

  • Early‑warning visibility
  • Prioritized corridors
  • Reduced surprise risk

5. Phase 4 — Governance Integration#

Objective: Connect risk signals to decision‑making.

Key Actions#

  • Define governance review thresholds
  • Align scoring with leadership review cadence
  • Establish documentation standards

Outcomes#

  • Predictable escalation
  • Clear accountability
  • Reduced ad‑hoc decision‑making

6. Phase 5 — Capital Alignment#

Objective: Tie infrastructure decisions to capital planning.

Key Actions#

  • Map corridors to capital cycles
  • Identify deferred modernization risk
  • Align near‑term and long‑term investments

Outcomes#

  • Defensible capital priorities
  • Fewer emergency expenditures
  • Long‑horizon clarity

7. Phase 6 — Audit & Feedback#

Objective: Close the governance loop.

Key Actions#

  • Validate scoring accuracy
  • Confirm intervention effectiveness
  • Capture lessons learned

Outcomes#

  • Continuous improvement
  • Institutional memory
  • Reduced repeat failures

8. Public Communication Integration#

Objective: Preserve and strengthen public trust.

Key Actions#

  • Prepare plain‑language explanations
  • Align messaging with decisions
  • Communicate proactively, not reactively

Outcomes#

  • Increased transparency
  • Reduced public confusion
  • Stronger confidence in leadership

9. Typical Implementation Timeline#

Most cities progress as follows:

  • 0–3 months — Orientation & corridor identification
  • 3–6 months — Baseline scoring & governance alignment
  • 6–12 months — Capital integration & audit loop

Pacing is adjusted to city capacity.


10. What Success Looks Like#

Successful implementation results in:

  • Fewer emergency surprises
  • Clear modernization priorities
  • Cross‑department coordination
  • Defensible capital decisions
  • Stronger public trust

RTT Facilities becomes how the city thinks about infrastructure, not an extra process.


11. What This Does Not Require#

Implementation does not require:

  • New departments
  • New software platforms
  • Large consulting engagements
  • Disruption of daily operations

RTT Facilities strengthens what already exists.


12. Closing Perspective#

Infrastructure risk does not disappear when ignored —
it accumulates quietly.

RTT Facilities gives cities a calm, structured way to:

  • See risk early
  • Act deliberately
  • Explain decisions clearly