And they are such a bunch of dunderheads, not reading our drawings (minds), aren't they? It wouldn't be as if the drawings were next to useless, would it? And that after years of seeing ten thousand stair details done wrong (requiring nails pounded upwards in an 8" deep space, say. You need a flummery agitator for that - no easy thing to rent.)
that they would lose patience. I imagine the pressure of standing in a half-finished space with a crew of eager lads and finding a tiny discrepancy in a drawing can lead to rash decision-making and a long-bomb treatment of a drawing set.
As if Archicad could actually put architectural information in a project for us.
Sit down sometime with somebody else's drawings and assess the quality of information. Starting from a position of no knowledge and having a drawing set as the only guide is daunting. In many cases, it isn't that we need to read a drawing, but we need to "Read into" the drawing the information necessary to actually build the project. Bad drawings get made because of over-familiarity and/or under-experience. The project is in our head and we think it should be easy to reveal in a simple set of drawings, but that is not the case. We either know too much and fail to express it, or, using a time honored work concept "people don't know what they don't know," aren't aware of what the builder needs to know.
These problems arise from a lack of mentorship and supervision. Of course, if your boss waves his arms like I do in my avatar, he is probably one of those "conceptual" types who is better at schmoinging-up to rich people than understanding building details or plans, for that matter. That is why he is wearing the suit. Suit=idiot). He'll be useless.
I wouldn't say any of this except that in September I found myself on a job site half a continent away from home with a sculpture packed in a bunch of crates. And some drawings. My own drawings. There was still a lot to figure out. The idiot who drew the drawing forgot that the ceiling beams were not exactly perpendicular to the tunnel (etc). So, from the getgo I was making things up. Careless, I admit, but it points out how thoroughly a designer must understand the construction process to make error-free documents.
For instance: I've been having this trouble with my best joke. There's a structural flaw in it and I was too close to it to see. I figure it needs two set-ups and I only put in one. There's nothing worse than no laughs at your best joke, except a contractor doing a long-bomb with your drawings into a mud filled excavation.
Dwight Atkinson