TY - JOUR
T1 - The Temporality of Project Success
T2 - Vindeby, the World’s First Offshore Wind Farm
AU - Feddersen, Jonathan
AU - Koll, Henrik
AU - Geraldi, Joana
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 Project Management Institute, Inc.
PY - 2024/4
Y1 - 2024/4
N2 - This article advances a temporal understanding of project success through a process study of Vindeby, an exploratory project developing the world’s first offshore wind farm. Pursuing a situated temporal view, our findings reveal how actors constructed Vindeby’s success differently when seeing the project as future, present, and past and how these constructions mutually shaped each other. Adding to prior literature adopting an over-time or in-time perspective, we develop a through-time perspective of project success and a model explaining the interplay of the three perspectives. We discuss how projects may serve as temporal stepping stones toward sustainable futures in the green transition and propose ways for project managers and policymakers to nurture this potential.
AB - This article advances a temporal understanding of project success through a process study of Vindeby, an exploratory project developing the world’s first offshore wind farm. Pursuing a situated temporal view, our findings reveal how actors constructed Vindeby’s success differently when seeing the project as future, present, and past and how these constructions mutually shaped each other. Adding to prior literature adopting an over-time or in-time perspective, we develop a through-time perspective of project success and a model explaining the interplay of the three perspectives. We discuss how projects may serve as temporal stepping stones toward sustainable futures in the green transition and propose ways for project managers and policymakers to nurture this potential.
U2 - 10.1177/87569728231217231
DO - 10.1177/87569728231217231
M3 - Journal article
SN - 8756-9728
VL - 55
SP - 167
EP - 186
JO - Project Management Journal
JF - Project Management Journal
IS - 2
ER -