lkjh345
Structural
- Nov 16, 2005
- 416
Out of curiosity, for those that still red line shop drawings by hand, how many copies of the submittal do you typically send back to the architect or contractor?
In the 'old' days, it was fairly typical in my area of the country (Nebraska, USA) for the structural engineer to recieve two copies of say structural steel shop drawings. One blue-line copy and one sepia (sp?) copy. Only the sepia copy was returned to the architect, and either they or the contractor made copies of this for anyone who wanted or needed them.
This system evolved (around here) into the structural engineer receiving several copies of the drawings and the engineer was expected to copy his comments onto several copies to send back to the architect. Thus turning the structural engineer (or his/her intern )into a medieval scribe copying comments onto each copy instead of using a copy machine to accomplish the same thing.
Under this system, I typically would return no more than 3 copies of a sumbittal to the architect. One copy of the architect, one copy for the General Contractor, and one copy for the fabricator or subcontractor doing this piece of the work.
In the last year I have recived requests on a few projects (demands really) to provide 5 or 6 copies of submittals back to the architect. The architects now claim that the owner(s) want copies, and the general contractor needs multiple copies, etc. (Personally, I really don't believe this.)
On some submittals, it is only a matter of a few minutes to copy my comments over, and send things on their way. But on large buildings, the shop drawings can be very extensive, and if there are a lot of comments on them, making extra copies involves considerable time and expense on our part to provide.
I am curious as to what other Structural Engineers are doing in this area.
- Do you copy your comments over by hand to mutliple copies? Or do you only send one 'reproducible' set back to the architect?
- If you need to provide mutliple copies back to the architect, how many copies do you typically send? Do you copy the commetns by hand, or send a copy to a print shop and make copies that way, at your expense?
In the 'old' days, it was fairly typical in my area of the country (Nebraska, USA) for the structural engineer to recieve two copies of say structural steel shop drawings. One blue-line copy and one sepia (sp?) copy. Only the sepia copy was returned to the architect, and either they or the contractor made copies of this for anyone who wanted or needed them.
This system evolved (around here) into the structural engineer receiving several copies of the drawings and the engineer was expected to copy his comments onto several copies to send back to the architect. Thus turning the structural engineer (or his/her intern )into a medieval scribe copying comments onto each copy instead of using a copy machine to accomplish the same thing.
Under this system, I typically would return no more than 3 copies of a sumbittal to the architect. One copy of the architect, one copy for the General Contractor, and one copy for the fabricator or subcontractor doing this piece of the work.
In the last year I have recived requests on a few projects (demands really) to provide 5 or 6 copies of submittals back to the architect. The architects now claim that the owner(s) want copies, and the general contractor needs multiple copies, etc. (Personally, I really don't believe this.)
On some submittals, it is only a matter of a few minutes to copy my comments over, and send things on their way. But on large buildings, the shop drawings can be very extensive, and if there are a lot of comments on them, making extra copies involves considerable time and expense on our part to provide.
I am curious as to what other Structural Engineers are doing in this area.
- Do you copy your comments over by hand to mutliple copies? Or do you only send one 'reproducible' set back to the architect?
- If you need to provide mutliple copies back to the architect, how many copies do you typically send? Do you copy the commetns by hand, or send a copy to a print shop and make copies that way, at your expense?