StrucDesignEIT just touched on a good point - the recent surge in BIM designs for buildings has significantly changed how designs are created "on paper".
Autocad is generally a bunch of dumb lines where you can tag some data.
Revit is a database that happens to be able to draw, or model in 3D, its subjects.
In using Revit, the interface between the design, the calculations, the representation of the building, the materials, etc. all come into play very early in the design process.
This is not very adaptable for simple drafting personnel. The "drawings" develop as the design develops. There are interfaces between the Revit model and the analysis software.
None of this works with a drafting person - at least not very well.
Once the mode is completed, I suppose a drafter could then start putting together plans, sections and details, but the engineer is so familiar with it by then that it would be foolish to then turn the model over to a drafter with no understanding of the deaign, the data, and the model.
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