Lomarandil
Structural
- Jun 10, 2014
- 1,905
Hello all --
I'm curious to hear about the standard of practice for "100%" or "construction" drawings in your regions of the world. What types of drawings are considered the standard practice to provide to a contractor? What is considered a bonus (nice for the contractor to have, or used to clarify something unusual, but not commonly included)? What would be considered deficient if omitted?
I'm most specifically interested in the A/E/C world, although anecdotes from other disciplines are welcomed.
A few examples from my experience:
[ul]
[li]In the western US, I believe it is most common to provide structural engineering drawings with rebar called out, hooks and splices noted, but not to provide bar bending schedules. I believe that in AUS/NZ, bar bending schedules are more commonly included in the designer's submittal.[/li]
[li]In the eastern US, I understand that it is somewhat common for connection design and detailing to be omitted and delegated from the structural EOR to another party.[/li]
[li]In Cambodia, electricians typically work from an electrical schematic design, and maybe a panel layout. Details are usually left to their discretion.[/li]
[li]The use of 3D views and BIM models (outside the design team) seems to vary widely.[/li]
[/ul]
Thanks!
----
just call me Lo.
I'm curious to hear about the standard of practice for "100%" or "construction" drawings in your regions of the world. What types of drawings are considered the standard practice to provide to a contractor? What is considered a bonus (nice for the contractor to have, or used to clarify something unusual, but not commonly included)? What would be considered deficient if omitted?
I'm most specifically interested in the A/E/C world, although anecdotes from other disciplines are welcomed.
A few examples from my experience:
[ul]
[li]In the western US, I believe it is most common to provide structural engineering drawings with rebar called out, hooks and splices noted, but not to provide bar bending schedules. I believe that in AUS/NZ, bar bending schedules are more commonly included in the designer's submittal.[/li]
[li]In the eastern US, I understand that it is somewhat common for connection design and detailing to be omitted and delegated from the structural EOR to another party.[/li]
[li]In Cambodia, electricians typically work from an electrical schematic design, and maybe a panel layout. Details are usually left to their discretion.[/li]
[li]The use of 3D views and BIM models (outside the design team) seems to vary widely.[/li]
[/ul]
Thanks!
----
just call me Lo.