It is fundamental to good building practice that the design takes into account the process of construction. Concrete, for example, is unlikely to be built as a monolithic mass. Each part of a concrete structure will be limited to that which can be built in a single working day. If the inevitability of day joints is considered in the design, their effects on strength can be controlled. It is less certain that their effect on the watertightness of the concrete can be controlled, but good design – which takes into account construction techniques – can greatly reduce the risk of impaired performance.
Good communication between designers and building workers helps to resolve problems. Some designers’ lack of practical knowledge is all too apparent to site staff when they are asked to work from ill-conceived drawn details. This encourages building workers to pay scant regard to detailed designs and to implement their own ideas of how to build, working round what they see as bad designs rather than discussing them with the designers. This is particularly common in design-and-build contracts where the builder stands to gain no contractual advantage from drawing attention to design defects.
During an investigation of a dispute between a Dutch contractor and manufacturer over a new partly built factory, the project engineer’s drawings were studied.