skeletron
Structural
- Jan 30, 2019
- 882
For renovation projects (my usual scope of work) I use the following sequence of drawings:
S1 = General Notes
S2 = Roof + Floor Plan
S3 = Foundation Plan
S4-S... = Details
My intent is that the renovation work is all about tracking down loads from top to bottom, and so stacking the plans this way is natural to follow from S2 to S3. However, a peer reviewer recently made a big deal about the sequence and how it should be reversed.
Is there really a distinct difference between having the foundation plan first as opposed to last?
I only see the difference being beneficial for new construction where the foundation is Step 1. But for renovations, the main issue is checking and ensuring a loadpath from top to bottom.
S1 = General Notes
S2 = Roof + Floor Plan
S3 = Foundation Plan
S4-S... = Details
My intent is that the renovation work is all about tracking down loads from top to bottom, and so stacking the plans this way is natural to follow from S2 to S3. However, a peer reviewer recently made a big deal about the sequence and how it should be reversed.
Is there really a distinct difference between having the foundation plan first as opposed to last?
I only see the difference being beneficial for new construction where the foundation is Step 1. But for renovations, the main issue is checking and ensuring a loadpath from top to bottom.