Why Most RFIs Originate in Construction Documentation and Not in Design?

In the AEC industry, coordination problems are often blamed on “design errors.” But in reality, most coordination breakdowns don’t originate during the conceptual or schematic design—they begin later, in the construction documentation phase.

The irony? By the time coordination issues become visible on site, they’re already expensive, disruptive and time-consuming to fix.

Let’s explore why construction documents—not design intent—are usually the root cause of coordination conflicts and how firms can prevent them.

 

  1. Design Is Intent. Documents Are Instructions.

During design stages (concept, schematic and design development), teams focus on:

  • Spatial planning
  • Structural feasibility
  • MEP system logic
  • Performance goals
  • Aesthetic intent

These stages defines what the building should achieve.

Construction documents, however, defines how it will actually be built.

They include:

  • Detailed drawings
  • Dimensions and tolerances
  • Material specifications
  • Sections, elevations, callouts
  • Schedules and notes
  • Coordination across disciplines

When inconsistencies appears in the construction documents—misaligned sections, outdated revisions, missing dimensions—they directly affects the execution.

A design may be perfectly sound conceptually. But if the documentation translating that design into buildable instructions is flawed, coordination failures are inevitable.

 

 

  1. Documentation Multiplies Complexity

By the construction documentation stage, complexity increases exponentially:

  • Structural grids must align with the architectural layouts
  • MEP services must pass through the structural zones
  • Ceiling heights must accommodate ducting and fire systems
  • Equipment clearances must match the manufacturer requirements
  • Door schedules must match plans and elevations

Each discipline produces dozens—sometimes hundreds—of drawings.

Small inconsistencies at this stage compounds quickly:

  • A 50mm level mismatch
  • A missing beam depth update
  • A duct routing change not reflected in sections
  • An uncoordinated shaft dimension

These issues don’t usually appear during the early design reviews because the level of detail isn’t yet that granular.

They surface in construction documents.

 

 

  1. Revisions Create Silent Conflicts

One of the biggest reasons coordination issues starts in documentation is revision mismanagement.

During fast-paced projects:

  • Architectural layouts change
  • Structural systems are optimized
  • MEP routes are rerouted
  • Client requirements evolve

If updates are not consistently propagated across all drawing sheets and disciplines:

  • Plans don’t match sections
  • Details contradict schedules
  • Reflected ceiling plans don’t match mechanical layouts

These are not “design problems.” They are documentation coordination failures.

 

 

  1. 2D Workflows Hide 3D Conflicts

Traditional 2D documentation often masks coordination clashes.

For example:

  • A duct looks fine in plan view
  • A beam looks fine in section
  • But in 3D, they physically occupy the same space

Without structured cross-disciplinary coordination checks, these conflicts remains invisible until:

  • Shop drawings are produced
  • Fabricators raise RFIs
  • Site installation begins

By then, the cost of remediation rises sharply.

This is where structured BIM Coordination Services provides value—detecting clashes digitally before the documentation is finalized and issued for construction.

 

 

  1. Assumptions Replace Clarity in Construction Documents

In early design stages, teams collaborate closely. But during documentation:

  • Assumptions increases
  • Coordination meetings reduces
  • Teams work in silos
  • Deadlines compresses the review time

Examples of common documentation assumptions:

  • “The structural team will adjust beam depth.”
  • “The contractor will resolve minor offsets.”
  • “MEP can shift the route on site.”

On site, such assumptions rarely translate into workable solutions.

Construction documents must eliminate the ambiguity—not create it.

 

 

  1. Over-Reliance on Redlines and Markups

Another hidden cause of coordination issues is excessive dependence on the redlines rather than just the structured model updates.

Redline workflows can result in:

  • Revisions reflected on certain drawings but missing from others
  • Details not updated after the plan changes
  • Conflicting revision clouds
  • Inconsistent drawing sets issued to consultants

If documentation control is weak, coordination deteriorates—even if the design logic is sound.

 

 

  1. Documentation Is Where Accountability Becomes Critical

Design allows flexibility. Construction documentation demands precision.

Once documents are issued:

  • Contractors price the project
  • Fabricators begin detailing
  • Permits are reviewed
  • Site execution is scheduled

Errors at this stage directly affect:

  • Budget
  • Timeline
  • Contractor trust
  • Client confidence

Professional Construction Documentation Services ensure that every drawing set:

  • Aligns across disciplines
  • Reflects the latest revisions
  • Maintains dimensional consistency
  • Matches specifications
  • Supports constructability

Coordination success is rarely about creative brilliance—it’s about documentation discipline.

 

 

  1. Site Problems Reveal Documentation Gaps

When issues arise on site, common symptoms includes:

  • RFIs regarding dimensions
  • Field adjustments to structural members
  • Duct rerouting
  • Ceiling drops not matching drawings
  • Equipment not fitting allocated space

In post-project reviews, many teams discover:

The design intent was correct.

The documentation translation was not.

 

  1. How to Prevent Coordination Issues in Documentation

To avoid coordination failures originating in construction documents, firms should:

  1. Coordinate Before Issuing IFC Sets

Clash detection should occur before the documents are finalized—not after fabrication starts.

  1. Standardize Revision Control

Use centralized revision tracking systems with strict update protocols.

  1. Model-Based Documentation

Link drawings directly to the coordinated BIM models rather than just drafting independently in 2D.

  1. Cross-Discipline QA Reviews

Architectural, structural and MEP teams should review the final documentation collectively.

  1. Define Clear Ownership

Every sheet and detail should have a clearly assigned owner responsible for coordination accuracy.

 

  1. The Real Lesson

Coordination issues don’t usually begin with the bad design.

They begin when:

  • The Detailed dimensions conflicts
  • Revisions are inconsistently applied
  • Sections don’t reflects the updated plans
  • Disciplines stop communicating during the documentation

In construction, clarity is currency.

And clarity is delivered through precise, coordinated documentation.

 

 

Final Thoughts

The construction documentation stage is where the design transforms into buildable reality. It is also where the coordination discipline becomes non-negotiable.

Firms that treats documentation as a technical afterthought often face:

  • RFIs
  • Rework
  • Budget overruns
  • Timeline delays

Firms that treat the documentation as a strategic coordination phase achieve:

  • Cleaner site execution
  • Fewer conflicts
  • Faster approvals
  • Higher profitability

Because in construction, problems don’t usually start with the design concept.

They start with how clearly—and how accurately—that design is documented.