One company found that there are about 10 RFIs for every $1 million spent on construction projects. RFIs are helpful to give teams more clarity on project details, but they can be vastly inefficient — causing delays, rework, and budget overruns. We’re going to explore RFIs, how they are traditionally completed, referenced, and what a digital construction platform such as Inertia can do to help.
During a project, an RFI is typically written by subcontractors to ask project plan questions and suggest changes, such as:
While these details would ideally be ironed out before a project begins, as the project gets built, questions are guaranteed to arise. Connecting these questions to answers in the most efficient way possible is key to keeping a project on schedule and on budget.
This is a tried and true process that 80% of the GC market is using successfully today. The challenge comes when that RFI needs to be referenced on site. Today, a contractor needs to hover over a pin on a drawing to see if an RFI (or multiple) are attached. Bring up the RFI in a separate tab and see the status and what might have changed from the original design.
What can go wrong? The RFI is pinned to one drawing, say the architectural floor plan but not the mechanical drawings. If you’re the mechanical sub, you might never see the RFI and therefore perform the work incorrectly leading to rework and other downstream impacts.
Or what if the RFI was pinned to one air-handler, but not the other 20 on the project. How can the GC ensure the contractor sees the RFI on each impacted air handler? Again, if this is missed, the impact can be significant.
With Inertia Intelligent Construction Drawings (ICD) - the RFI is not attached to a pin or cloud but to the actual element that is impacted by the RFI. For the air handler example above, in Inertia ICD, you can attach the Procore RFI directly to the air handler and apply this to all like elements (in this case the other 20 air handlers).
When the sub is onsite to perform the required work, they can simply reference the Inertia Intelligent Drawing, click on the air handler, and immediately see all the Procore RFI’s attached to that object, in addition, any other relevant information like submittals, photos, observations, inspections are also visible along with their statuses. In this way, the sub has all the real-time information they need to proceed with their tasks. Because the RFI is attached to the Air Handler object, no matter which Intelligent drawing is referenced, architectural, mechanical, plumbing, etc… - the RFI is always right there to ensure you never have rework caused by not referencing the RFIs before proceeding. Imagine eliminating the frustration knowing all the work that went in to creating, researching and revising the RFI’s only to have all that information ignored due to inability of finding the information when needed.
What other ways have you found to speed up your process to stay within budget?
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And, if you haven’t already, be sure to schedule a demo to see our intelligent drawing software in action.