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site plans

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bigbaby

Civil/Environmental
Aug 3, 2006
1
I do alot of site plans, and wonder if there is a more productive way to complete them. I copy the plat plan into a drawing them, add a title block around the lot, trim and delete the remaining portion of the drawing. This process in very time consuming and boring. Is there and cad commands that would incease my speed.Thanks
 
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Yes. Standard practice is to xref (or insert) the titleblock in paperspace, create a viewport to show area of interest. No need to trim and delete. See the AutoCAD forum and search threads for discussion of use of paperspace for titleblock setup and plotting.
 
You can use templates in other CAD programs, too.
 
I do what CarlB does, then click in the viewport and use command DV then TW option, to rotate view into the best alignment. It takes seconds.

Why are you trimming a site drawing into a title block? Just curious, I can't think of a reason to do that.

Engineering is the practice of the art of science - Steve
 
I also like to keep the main portion of the project in model space as an xreference. I then use paper space in view ports to control control my layers. I do a ton of site work, more than I like but often the site engineer ends up doing the utility, grading and erosion control planning. I often use layer manager to also control the layers and that way when I plot the drawing, I can turn on and off the correct layers for that given drawing. It cuts down on time and energy that I often waisted before. Good Luck.
 
In my local area (jurisdiction) the county accepts site plans for residential which are prepared by local draftspersons (non-registered).
As an EOR for a project I am approached with a set of draftsperson plans which the owner wants to have structural detailing (stamping & calcs) for submittal to the county. This is usually a result of the plans already being submitted and the plancheck response being 'does not conform to conventional construction...have an engineer certify'.

It seems these site-map preparers (non-registered draftspersons/contractors) are providing a lot of work, at less expense to the home owner, and then request the homeowner to sign the map as prepared as an owner-builder.
This seems to be a 'gray area' with the county jurisdiction, and the non-enforcement of 'Licensed Surveyor map preparation' contradicts the professions code. I am wondering;
-Is it common practice for new light-framed residential construction site map preparation to be done by non-licensed draftspersons?
-Are there jurisdictions which Require licensed professionals do site maps?
-Is there any reference to owner-litigation against EOR's because of incorrect map preparation?

For myself, I continually site-check projects as SOP but wonder if my fellow competing engineers include that expense in their bid for the work being done. It seems like as time goes on, the remaining lots available for building/sale are problem lots that should require extra prudence.
 
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