skeletron
Structural
- Jan 30, 2019
- 875
For discussion:
1. What constitutes a review of another professional's work?
2. At what point do you consider the review necessitating contacting the other professionals for notice? Is this a professional courtesy or a mandated requirement in your jurisdiction and/or opinion?
For the purposes of context:
Situation A: A contractor requests a second opinion on a single issue noted on site. You receive the project documentation and review the information (drawings, timeline of events based on reports and correspondence, etc.) prior to attending site. Your opinion is based on the background information and your observations on site.
Situation B: A client engages you to provide a solution to a problem. They offer you the design from a proposed solution by another engineer, which they are seeking cost-savings or improvement. You review the proposed solution to get "the lay of the land" but, ultimately, come up with an alternate solution.
Situation C: A client engages you for a renovation/addition to an existing, recently built structure (5-10 years old). They provide existing drawings, as required to tie-in the new to existing. In your review of the work, you notice an issue with the existing structure that may cause future problems.
Situation D: A client requests a site review. They provide existing drawings prior to your site assessment. You review the drawings prior to attending site.
I'm interested in hearing the interpretations/opinions on others.
1. What constitutes a review of another professional's work?
2. At what point do you consider the review necessitating contacting the other professionals for notice? Is this a professional courtesy or a mandated requirement in your jurisdiction and/or opinion?
For the purposes of context:
Situation A: A contractor requests a second opinion on a single issue noted on site. You receive the project documentation and review the information (drawings, timeline of events based on reports and correspondence, etc.) prior to attending site. Your opinion is based on the background information and your observations on site.
Situation B: A client engages you to provide a solution to a problem. They offer you the design from a proposed solution by another engineer, which they are seeking cost-savings or improvement. You review the proposed solution to get "the lay of the land" but, ultimately, come up with an alternate solution.
Situation C: A client engages you for a renovation/addition to an existing, recently built structure (5-10 years old). They provide existing drawings, as required to tie-in the new to existing. In your review of the work, you notice an issue with the existing structure that may cause future problems.
Situation D: A client requests a site review. They provide existing drawings prior to your site assessment. You review the drawings prior to attending site.
I'm interested in hearing the interpretations/opinions on others.