ROLE
OF ARCHITECT OR ENGINEER DURING CONSTRUCTION
After the award of the
construction contract, the architect or engineer generally continues to assist
the client in relations with the contractor.
Site Observation
As part of their ongoing
services during construction, and depending on the scale and complexity of the project, architects and
engineers may make periodic site visits or maintain full-time representation on-site during a portion or all of the construction period. The professional’s
role is to expedite day-to-day communication and decision making by having
on-site personnel available to respond to required drawing and specification
clarifications.
Site-observation
requirements for the project should be discussed with the client at the onset
of the project and be outlined in the architect-client agreement. Many clients
prefer periodic or regularly scheduled site visits by the design
professional. A provision for additional or full-time on-site representation,
however, can be ad- dressed in the agreement, and compensation for this
additional service can be outlined in the agreement for discussion with the
client later in the development process or during the construction phase. The
client and the architect and engineer should agree on the appropriate amount of
site visitation provided in the architect’s basic services to allow adequate
site-observation services based on specific project conditions.
If periodic site
observations are made, the architect should report such observations to the
client in written form. This should call attention to items observed that do not meet the intent of the
construction documents. It is normally left to the client to reject or replace
work unless such defective work involves life safety, health, or welfare of the building occupants or is a defect
involving structural integrity. If the architect provides full-time site
observation services, daily or weekly reports should be issued to the client
outlining items observed that are not in accordance with the construction
documents or design intent.
Site Record Keeping
Depending on contractual
requirements for service during the construction phase, the architect may establish a field office.
In this event, dual record-keeping is suggested between the site and the architect’s office so that records required for the daily administration of
construction are readily accessible on-site. Contractor correspondence, field
reports, testing and balancing reports, shop drawings, record documents,
contractor payment requests, change orders, bulletin issues, field meeting
minutes, and schedules are used continually during construction. Computer
systems and electronic mail make the communication process somewhat easy to
control.
Inspection and Testing
Technical specifications
require testing and inspection of various material and building systems during
construction to verify that the intent of the design and construction documents
is being fulfilled under field conditions. Testing is required where visual
observations cannot verify actual conditions. Subsurface conditions, concrete
and steel testing, welding, air infiltration, and air and water balancing of
mechanical systems are such building elements that require inspection and
testing services. Normally, these services are performed by an independent
testing agency employed directly by the client so that third-party evaluation
can be obtained.
Although the architect does
not become involved in the conduct of work or determine the means or methods of
construction, the architect has the general responsibility to the client to see
that the work is installed in general accordance with the contract documents.
Other areas of inspection
and testing involve establishing and checking benchmarks for horizontal and
vertical alignment, examining soils and backfill material, compaction testing,
examining subsurface retention systems, inspecting connections to public
utilities, verifying subsoil drainage, verifying structural column centerlines
and base-plate locations (if applicable), checking alignment and bracing of
concrete formwork, verifying concrete strength and quality, and other similar
items.
Payment Requests
The contractor normally
submits a consolidated payment request monthly to the architect and client for
review and certification. The payment request should be subdivided by trade and
compared with the schedule of values for each trade that would have been
submitted with the subcontractor bid if required by the instructions to bidders
and bid form. The architect should review the payment request with respect to
the percentage of completion of the pertinent work item or trade.
Some clients or lending
institutions require that a partial waiver of lien be sub- mitted for each work item or trade with each payment request. This partial waiver of lien can either be for the prior monthly
request, which will indicate that the prior month’s payment has been received,
or in certain cases for the current monthly request. If the latter procedure is
followed, the waiver may require revision, de- pending on the architect’s
review, if a work-item or trade-payment request is modified. The architect is
not expected to audit the payment request or check the mathematical
calculations for accuracy.
Change Orders
The contractor’s change-order
requests require the input of the architect, engineer, and client and are
usually acted on as part of the payment request procedure. A change order is the
instrument for amending the original contract amount and schedule, as submitted
with the bid and agreed on in the client-contractor contract.
Change orders can result from departures from the contract documents
ordered during construction, by the architect, engineer, or client; errors or
omissions; field conditions; unforeseen subsoil; or other similar conditions.
A change order outlines the
nature of the change and the effect, if any, on the contract amount and
construction schedule. Change orders can occur with both a zero cost and zero schedule change.
Nevertheless, they should be documented in writing and approved by the contractor, architect, and client to
acknowledge that the changes were made,
with no impact. Change orders are also used to permit a material substitution
when a material or system not included in the contract documents is found
acceptable by the client and architect. For material substitutions proposed by
the contractor, schedule revisions are not formally recognized as a valid
change.
The sum of the change-order
amounts is added or deducted from the original contract amount. Then, the revised
contract amount is carried forward on the con- tractor’s consolidated
application for payment after the change orders have been signed by all
parties. The normal contractor payment request procedure is then followed, on
the basis of the new contract amount. If the schedule is changed because of a change order, the
subsequent issue of the construction schedule should indicate the revised
completion or move-in date, or both, that result from the approved change.
Project Closeout
Project closeout involves
all parties, including subcontractors and material suppliers. It should be
addressed early in the construction phase so that the closeout can be expedited
and documented in an organized and meaningful manner. At this point in the construction process, the attention of the contractor and
architect is focused on accomplishing
the necessary paperwork and administrative functions required for final
acceptance of the work and issuance of the contractor’s final consolidated
application for payment and final waiver of lien.
The
normal project closeout proceeds as follows:
1. The contractor formally
notifies the architect and the client that the contracted work is
substantially complete.
2. From on-site
observations and representations made by the contractor, the architect
documents substantial completion with the client and the contractor. In some
cases, this may trigger the start of certain guarantees or warranties,
depending on the provisions of the general and supplementary conditions of the
contract.
3. For some projects that
are phased, some but not all the building systems may be recognized by the architect and the
client as being substantially complete. This should be well-documented, since
start dates for warranty and guarantee periods for various building systems or equipment may vary.
4. On-site visits are made
by the architect and representatives of the client, sometimes called a
walk-through, and a final punch list is developed by the architect to document
items requiring remedial work or replacement to meet the requirement of the
construction documents.
5. A complete keying
schedule, with the master, sub-master, room, and speciality keys, is documented by
the contractor and delivered to the client.
6. The contractor submits
all record drawings, as-builts, testing and balancing reports, and other
administrative paperwork required by the contract documents.
7. The contractor should
submit all required guarantees, warranties, certificates, and bonds required by
the general and supplementary conditions of the contract or technical
specifications for each work item or trade outlined in the breakdown of the contractor’s consolidated final payment
request.
8. The contractor corrects
all work noted on the punch list. A final observation of the corrected work may then be made by the
architect and client.
9. If the client accepts
the work, the architect sends a certificate of completion to the contractor
with a copy to the client. The certificate documents that the final completion of
the work has occurred. All required operating manuals and maintenance
instructions are given to the architect for document control
and forwarding to the client.
10. The contractor submits
final waivers of lien from each subcontractor or material supplier. Also provided
is an affidavit stating that all invoices have been paid, with the exception of
those amounts shown on the final waiver of lien. With these documents, the
contractor submits the final consolidated payment request, including all change
orders.
11. The architect sends a final certificate of payment to the client,
with a copy to the contractor.
12. The contractor provides any required certificate of occupancy,
indicating that the building authorities have jurisdiction over the project
approve occupancy of the space for the intended use.
13. The client makes final
payment to the contractor and notifies
the architect of this.
This process is important
inasmuch as it can trigger the transfer of risk from the contractor’s insurance
program during construction to the client’s insurance program for the completed
project.
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SOURCE: BUILDING DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION HANDBOOK -Sixth Edition - McGRAW-HILL
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