Green Structural Engineering
Structural
- Oct 30, 2019
- 1
Top 3 problems you encounter and have to overcome working in structural engineering.... GO!
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jayrod12 said:More and more often I am getting proposed change notice pricing for less than $500. When a project goes that route, we review all of their costs with a fine toothed comb and bring them down at every chance possible.
Gandalf said:I found it is the small everyday deeds of ordinary folk that keep the darkness at bay
Galatians 6:9 said:So let’s not get tired of doing what is good. At just the right time we will reap a harvest of blessing if we don’t give up.
Done this (although less critical than a ground)... Gotta let the peer reviewers justify themselves.3DDave said:I knew some EEs who took to specifically adding obvious flaws in their submittals to one program lead because if he did not see a flaw, he would start looking for anything else he could change just to feel like he contributed. Anyone turning in well thought out work got screwed over, sometimes by arbitrarily increasing performance requirements ("I know it meets what the customer wants, but if it's twice as good isn't that better?") Better to leave off a ground wire and poof - ego gratification for finding it.
Celt83 said:Everyone thinks everyone else is stupid...
phamENG said:That's a sobering thought.
phamENG said:The forum has been discussing a set of "Permit Drawings" that were signed and sealed by the EOR that appear very....abnormal? It's a problem I faced on most projects. The owner is in such a rush, they want to get the permit process started early - some would say to "reserve their place in line" so they didn't have to wait when the design was finished. To put a stop to this, the localities started rejecting anything that said "not for construction" or "for permit only" (why would they review something that isn't going to be built?). You'd think our good, upstanding, and ethical profession would respond by saying ok, sorry, we'll wait until we're done. Nope. Everyone just took the NFC stamps off and submitted them even though they knew they weren't done and couldn't be safely built. I nearly got into a shouting match with my boss over it on more than one occasion. We even sent off a "permit set" only to not hear back from the architect until they sent us angry emails and RFI's from the contractor who was halfway done with the building!
I think it comes back to the schedule pressures we've been discussing. Are we going to push back as a profession because it could (we'll have to wait for the final report on the hotel to know for sure in that case) cause significant life safety risks? If so, how?
How much? Experts think AGI by 2060 and then it would have to be specialized and scaled down in both cost and power.KootK said:Were I a betting man, I'd wager that we'll probably be done by 2050.
winelandv said:Sorry, phamENG. Welcome to the world of being legally a profession, but priced as a commodity.