sundale
Structural
- Jan 18, 2005
- 211
I would like some input on the following issue.
I have a two story 190'x43' or so steel building. The roof is framed with bar joists with steel spandrels and columns and the floor is composite steel beams and girders with steel WF and tube columns. The lateral system is a steel OMRF at the roof and cip ordinary reinforced shearwalls from the floor to ground.
Our notes and specifications both call for steel shop drawings. The owner's lowest bid fabricator, who is also the erector, is going to fabricate the pieces without any shop drawings.
I wrote a pretty stern letter to the Owner stating:
1. the drawings represent our professional opinion: a directive not a suggestion
2. it is standard industry practice to do shops for such a structure
3. I may not have time to drop all other projects to deal with field fixes when these pieces are hanging from a crane
4. I do not see how a welder could make the pieces without having a detailed piece drawing in front of him
4. there are many prescribed Special Inspection requirements that need to be met in the shop and the field
Basically, I was overruled by the Owner and received a nasty letter from them with the following adjectives: arrogant, condescending, ridiculous, unwilling, unprofessional, etc... How fun.
The drawings represent the final product and how the contractor gets there is definitely a "means and methods" issue. On the flip side, I have never heard of trying to do such a project without steel shops. Another local fabricator (whose bid was higher) said they would not try such a thing. Every structural engineer I have talked to said that's crazy to do this without shops.
As an example, the fabricator's column erection scheme is to field weld the column to the base plate. I asked him how does one plumb the column as I think the weld shrinkage upon cooling will pull the column out of plumb. He said that's no problem with a 12' level on the column... There is a reason the rest of the world uses shim and grout or double nuts and grout to plumb a column.
The only "stick" I have left is the Chapter 17 Special Inspection stuff. This is law. Writing a response to an Owner's letter like that is most likely a waste of time: their opinion is formulated.
Any opinions and/or sage advice would be greatly appreciated.
I have a two story 190'x43' or so steel building. The roof is framed with bar joists with steel spandrels and columns and the floor is composite steel beams and girders with steel WF and tube columns. The lateral system is a steel OMRF at the roof and cip ordinary reinforced shearwalls from the floor to ground.
Our notes and specifications both call for steel shop drawings. The owner's lowest bid fabricator, who is also the erector, is going to fabricate the pieces without any shop drawings.
I wrote a pretty stern letter to the Owner stating:
1. the drawings represent our professional opinion: a directive not a suggestion
2. it is standard industry practice to do shops for such a structure
3. I may not have time to drop all other projects to deal with field fixes when these pieces are hanging from a crane
4. I do not see how a welder could make the pieces without having a detailed piece drawing in front of him
4. there are many prescribed Special Inspection requirements that need to be met in the shop and the field
Basically, I was overruled by the Owner and received a nasty letter from them with the following adjectives: arrogant, condescending, ridiculous, unwilling, unprofessional, etc... How fun.
The drawings represent the final product and how the contractor gets there is definitely a "means and methods" issue. On the flip side, I have never heard of trying to do such a project without steel shops. Another local fabricator (whose bid was higher) said they would not try such a thing. Every structural engineer I have talked to said that's crazy to do this without shops.
As an example, the fabricator's column erection scheme is to field weld the column to the base plate. I asked him how does one plumb the column as I think the weld shrinkage upon cooling will pull the column out of plumb. He said that's no problem with a 12' level on the column... There is a reason the rest of the world uses shim and grout or double nuts and grout to plumb a column.
The only "stick" I have left is the Chapter 17 Special Inspection stuff. This is law. Writing a response to an Owner's letter like that is most likely a waste of time: their opinion is formulated.
Any opinions and/or sage advice would be greatly appreciated.