Gaps between design disciplines are a common cause of construction
change orders. In some cases, the consulting disciplines' standard
practices may generate a gap. For example, the electrical engineer may
establish an electrical scope of work that "stops" 10 feet outside the
building, while the site civil engineer may expect (and indicate on the
site drawings) that the electrical contractor will provide power to a
sewage lift station that is 15 feet outside the building. Unfortunately,
it is quite possible that neither the electrical engineer nor the civil
engineer will become aware of this gap in electrical service until the
contractor submits an RFI.
Similar gaps can occur
between plumbing and site trades, between mechanical and general
building trades, between structural steel and miscellaneous metals
trades, and between other trades. In most cases, proactive coordination
by the project architect during the construction documents phase can
help to minimize these gaps."Proactive" coordination means getting
involved in finding and highlighting possible gaps and managing document
revisions to eliminate the gaps by conferring with the related
disciplines, considering applicable trade practices and regulations, and
assigning responsibility to the most appropriate party. (It's usually
not enough (and not really proactive) to simply tell the consultants to
work it out between themselves.)
No comments:
Post a Comment