JTPE
Structural
- Jun 17, 2002
- 53
I agree the idea of special inspections is good, but as more and more projects enter into construction I am finding trouble. In general, my time is stretched to breaking as contractors are calling for special inspections. It seems we have releaved contractors (who are on site all day) from responsibility of assuring compliance with the design drawings, which is why we make drawings in the first place. Now as EOR I am held responsible that 'the building is fully constructed in compliance with the drawings and code'. This seems wrong to me, I or my agent is not on site all day. Surely there is opportunity for non compliant issues to slide by my(our)periodic review. Yet there will be a document floating around that has my seal saying that I certify its total compliance. This document will carry lots of weight in the event of trouble. Am I alone in this worry? Am I shirking my responsibility?
In a more specific case, what about pre-engineered metal buildings. My company does a fair amout of foundation design for these. The structure of course is bought by the contractor and designed by his metal building designer. Code officials are calling me wanting a steel section to my SSI. I contact the contractor to get him to instruct the PEMB manufactureer to write the section, but the manufactureer refuses. Now what? When I seal a inspection report reference a metal building structure(to keep the project and client happy), am I certifying that the original design was correct? If you say "no" then consider who is going to separate design mistakes from construction mistakes if a failure happens? A lawyer?
any thoughts are appreciated.
In a more specific case, what about pre-engineered metal buildings. My company does a fair amout of foundation design for these. The structure of course is bought by the contractor and designed by his metal building designer. Code officials are calling me wanting a steel section to my SSI. I contact the contractor to get him to instruct the PEMB manufactureer to write the section, but the manufactureer refuses. Now what? When I seal a inspection report reference a metal building structure(to keep the project and client happy), am I certifying that the original design was correct? If you say "no" then consider who is going to separate design mistakes from construction mistakes if a failure happens? A lawyer?
any thoughts are appreciated.