Hacksaw82
Structural
- Jul 3, 2009
- 25
Hi all, I was hoping to get some insight on something.
I have a renovation project, fairly small in size, but with some added complexity. The fee wasn't high enough for the 'big guys' to come out to play (general contractor, or subs) so we are stuck with some lower end contractors, in terms of experience.
Without saying too much, we are removing the wood floor system of a typical mid-west city brick storefront building (1920s probably), and replacing it with steel. We are removing the second level wood floor, and creating a clear story. We are putting steel back to replace the restistance the wood floor was bracing the walls with. The design and drawings went great, it looked like it was going to be a beautiful project. Then we got the steel shop drawings...
Basically they are a direct redraw of my drawings. No piece sheets, no erection type plans. They didn't even bother calling out the grades of steel. We rejected them three times and now the project is severely behind schedule. After a few meetings it became clear the contractor didn't know what industry standards were. We even sent him shops from other jobs, and told him, this is what we expect. But still no luck, he seems content to just copy what ever I give him, and say 'i will build it right in the field'.
We worked with it enough, and we think now at least he gets what the project is. But what standards are out there for shop drawings? Does the AISC have something the contractors are required to follow? I've looked through the 13th edition, and they do have sections on shop drawings, but provide no specific requirements. The project specs were equally toothless. Should my company add more specific language for submittal quality? We kept saying these don't conform to industry standards, but couldn't find anywhere on what those standards are, or why the contractor must follow them.
As always, you thoughts are very appriciated!
I have a renovation project, fairly small in size, but with some added complexity. The fee wasn't high enough for the 'big guys' to come out to play (general contractor, or subs) so we are stuck with some lower end contractors, in terms of experience.
Without saying too much, we are removing the wood floor system of a typical mid-west city brick storefront building (1920s probably), and replacing it with steel. We are removing the second level wood floor, and creating a clear story. We are putting steel back to replace the restistance the wood floor was bracing the walls with. The design and drawings went great, it looked like it was going to be a beautiful project. Then we got the steel shop drawings...
Basically they are a direct redraw of my drawings. No piece sheets, no erection type plans. They didn't even bother calling out the grades of steel. We rejected them three times and now the project is severely behind schedule. After a few meetings it became clear the contractor didn't know what industry standards were. We even sent him shops from other jobs, and told him, this is what we expect. But still no luck, he seems content to just copy what ever I give him, and say 'i will build it right in the field'.
We worked with it enough, and we think now at least he gets what the project is. But what standards are out there for shop drawings? Does the AISC have something the contractors are required to follow? I've looked through the 13th edition, and they do have sections on shop drawings, but provide no specific requirements. The project specs were equally toothless. Should my company add more specific language for submittal quality? We kept saying these don't conform to industry standards, but couldn't find anywhere on what those standards are, or why the contractor must follow them.
As always, you thoughts are very appriciated!