| ARCH229 | MONDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2000 | ||||||||||||||||
| Contract negotiations: who does what, when, & how | |||||||||||||||||
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| This second draft also clearly establishes the edges (interface limits) of each discreet project within the total project. Much of the language that Field Paoli found to be overly broad is still contained in the second draft of the contact.
O'Brien Krietzberg sent the third draft of the contract to Field Paoli in November of 1999.Field Paoli's file notes indicate that they are is still concerned about overly broad language that directs liability disproportionately back to the architect/design team. |
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| Steve Winkel recalled conversations with O'Brien Krietzberg, where the point was made that if the liability provisions of the contract were too broad, they would be essentially uninsurable. Apparently this argument was persuasive because most of the overly broad language was removed from the final version of the contract that followed. | |||||||||||||||||
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