human909 said:
Why would you care how the shop drawings are achieved as longs as they get there. A steel detailer can produce terrible show drawings with or without being supplied a CAD drawing.
The main concern here is as Tomfh said, we have no control of how the sub-contractor actually uses our drawings and if there is something that doesn't quite match up to the architects or other plans as far as dimensions are concerned the blame is placed solely on the engineer and not the contractor who should be verifying this information. In an ideal world we would have time to update the CAD plans/Revit Model to match the architects perfectly however as I'm sure many can tell you, it's almost impossible with the constant short deadlines and last minute changes that often times the EOR isn't even made aware of.
human909 said:
I'm a key playing in running a project at the moment. We have many items contracted, the key players being an architects, civil and traffic engineers as well as mechanical electrical etc.... It is design and build. I expect everybody to provide CAD files as required and they do so. When I design up a steel structure I'll readily export it in 3D to provide to steel detailers for the production of workshop drawings. It costs me nothing and gains me an immense amount of goodwill and cost savings.
Welcome to the world of Design-Bid-Build, the vast majority of buildings in my area and I would be willing to bet the US in general is design-bid-build, in this setup the owner wants as cheap of design fees as possible and shops around trying to get disciplines to undercut each other a good bit. It's highly competitive. This is typically because in the design-bid-build setup the owner pays for the design out of pocket and then gets investors and bids it out to contractors; whereas in Design-Build the design fees are built into the contractors costs and project loans which is "easier to hide the design costs" resulting in better fees and better coordination. In the design-bid-build scenario there is little to no incentive to work with the contractor on VE options, contractor errors, etc. without just compensation for your time.
It sounds like you may work in the horizontal design of structures, ie bridges? I have heard those go much smoother with MUCH better fees.
phamENG said:
Stenbrook - that's an ideal scenario, and if I knew the contractor and subs were going to do it right I wouldn't have a problem with it. Have them sign the form, and off go the drawings. If there's a mistake lurking in them that QC missed or that doesn't impact the content of the drawings as issued, the detailer will catch it, and either report it or fix it in the shop drawings. But more and more, errors are just copied over and nobody catches them until fit up and it doesn't fit. So I think Aesur is trying to prevent those types from getting the CAD files - the ones who are just doing it as a shortcut and not adding value to the project.
Yes, this is exactly what I am trying to prevent. However there is also the constant pressure of contractors trying to push off their work onto the engineers without just compensation to fix their mistakes in the field, etc. I see providing CAD files for them as just yet another area they are working to push their (or their subs) work off onto us but yet they still charge their normal prices that include producing the shop drawings from the construction documents (ie sealed set) instead of our CAD files. Our job is to provide the owner with a safe engineered efficient design, not save the contractor money by doing their job for them. If the contractor was too give the owner a credit back for their time saved on creating shop drawings, etc.. then this would be a different story, however if all we are doing is continuing the pattern of doing their job to save them money then shouldn't we see a cut of the extra profit?
@dik - between the emails, purging the files, saving, CAD release forms, etc.. this takes anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour depending on project size. I am not sure what your hourly rates are, but that is a good chunk of change and time our of our day when there are only 8 "work hours" in a day (not that I have worked less than 8 hours a day in years). Ideally we should be working toward creating efficiencies to get our work/life balance back and make decent money, not adding more work to our plates to make someone else a profit just to have them blame us if there is an error on the drawing that they copied on the shop drawings.
@drawoh - The only proprietary items we have in CAD are the custom scripts/tools we developed and use to simply drawing creation. These are removed through purging quite easily. The information the drawings can be easily copied from the PDF's and in fact if you look at many structural details you will see patterns that they are mostly all the same. The CAD release form is more of a form saying what they can and can't use the drawings for, stating that the contractor shall use the sealed contract drawings and stating that the contractor agrees to indemnify us for any issues arising from the use of the CAD drawings. Mostly legal jargon to help protect the engineer.