The scope of work including task descriptions in the Unit Price Book, drawings, sketches, illustrations, specifications or other pertinent information included on or attached to the Job Order.
Plan, profiles, typical cross-sections, and supplemental drawings that show the locations, character, dimensions, and details of the work to be done.
Full architectural plans specifying finishes, drainage and other details are not necessary at the planning stage. The application must be accompanied with drawings and probably photographs showing the existing and proposed situations. The proposals must be described in sufficient detail for the planners to understand what it will look like and how it will affect the neighbours.
The drawings that show the layout and design of the building works, including dimensions and elevations.
Drawings used in building a house, usually showing the structure in a horizontal plane, from above, but without the roof. A floor plan shows the floor area of a structure in a horizontal plane. A "section" is a vertical cross section from roof to foundation. An elevation is a drawing of one side of a house.
The approved plans, profiles, typical sections, cross sections, shop drawings and supplemental drawings or exact reproductions thereof, which show the location, extent, layout and dimensions as well as the scope, character, and details of the work to be done.
A term used to represent all drawings including sections and details; and any supplemental drawings for complete execution of a specific project
The technical drawings - or blueprints - of the project. Should include the specifications.
The plans, profiles, typical cross-sections, standard construction drawings, working drawings, and supplemental drawings, approved by the Department, or exact reproductions thereof, that show the location, character, dimensions, and details of the Work.
Drawings for a project are called plans, prints or blueprints. They are drawn to scale and include construction details, specifications, and other critical information. The contractor translates this information into a finished structure.