“…These included: ensuring healthy cashflow (4 contractors), maintenance of high turnover figures (2 contractors), financial reasons (2 contractors), the belief that risk can be eliminated (2 contractors), an investment project with a relatively late delivery date (1 contractor), a high value investment project (1 contractor), the prestige given by the project -the renovation of Auschwitz (1 contractor), the need to perform a given task (1 contractor), an investment project with highly filled order portfolio (1 contractor), poor market conditions -a small number of tenders (1 contractor), good construction practice (1 contractor), a big number of employees (1 contractor), more lucrative works (1 contractor), the company's position on the market (1 contractor), the investor's insolvency (1 contractor), technical documentation (1 contractor). Such arguments allow us to get a better understanding of the motives behind construction contractors' practical decisions, although only 9% of them agreed to absorb all the risk (Myrczek, and Tworek, 2019;Myrczek et al, 2020). As many as 38% of the contractors eliminate risks, 34% of the respondents mitigate risks, while 13% of them transfer risk onto other participants of investment and construction processes (Myrczek, and Tworek, 2019;Myrczek et al, 2020).…”