Adrienne:
Be especially careful on this particular project as it is a condo building. Most insurance companies don't want us to even
work on them. Interior work, if plumbing is involved, for instance, can affect neighbor units during construction and
result in lawsuits from outside of the client you contract with. I do believe that you can (with the assistance of an attorney) create a carefully
worded contract that states that you are not doing CA and are indemnified against claims....but property gets sold (more frequently
with condos) and you will potentially have future owners of that property who might take issue with work that was done. Best to at least feel comfortable HOW the work was done, than be in the dark during construction. And you mentioned that the owner doesn't even want CD's. But you would have to complete those to get the project permit ready.
I had a recent good size new construction project where the general contractor convinced the client upon signing his contract that the client would be saving a lot of money by not having the architect involved during construction. No site meetings. No observation. Contractors often exclusively have the ear of the property owner during construction and you don't have any way to know what is being done incorrectly and falsely blamed on your drawings. It can be a real nightmare to be out of the loop. Clients need to be educated that they
don't get what they don't pay for. Your being involved in CA is mutually beneficial, and is a tiny portion of our fee as architects. We are problem solvers, and issues come up, especially in existing buildings, which can often require a thoughtful solution so the owner doesn't need to compromise their goals. Some contractors are good at this, but not all. Two heads are better than one.
Stand your ground.
Gina Moffitt, AIA
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Gina Moffitt AIA
owner
Kiyohara Moffitt
Los Angeles CA
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Original Message:
Sent: 02-05-2019 12:12
From: Adrienne Turner
Subject: Waiving Liability w/ no CA services
I'm hoping I can get some advice on clients who would like to engage my services through building permit only. I have language in my contract that states that liability is waived should I not be retained for CA. If it is already agreed upon that the client does NOT want CA (or construction documents for that matter) do I have them sign the contract anyway knowing I will be waiving liability? Should I even contract with an owner who is requesting up to permit drawings only, and sign and seal those drawings? I'm happy to do Schematic Design services only and I have a separate contract for that but this would be a first where a building permit is requested.
I'm asking in general but the project in question is an interior renovation of a Master Suite in a condo building.
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Adrienne Turner AIA
Owner
Swiatocha Architecture & Design
Philadelphia PA
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