RickAstoria
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- Oct 17, 2009
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Mark K,Mark K said:In California and I would expect other states, building designers have no legal status.An architect or engineer who works on a project with a building designer needs to be careful or he/she may end up accepting more liability than was the original intention.
Most building designers who undergoes certification are competent and knows the building codes and follows them. They are as good as many architects who practices in residential in most cases. After all, many of them do have many years of experience and that statistical difference in quality is just not there. We do have a legal status, it is in the exemption. In fact, California has precedence because California actually had a registered building designer program which recognized building designer certification. Can it have more legal recognition... yes.
NOTE: This is a little excursion from the thread topic.
I can propose some minor language changes for the I-codes. A few modifications in 106.1/R106.1, add "Certified Design Professionals" as a definition and some minor amendments. It means ICC and state/local jurisdictions maintains a list of qualified certification programs. Little language tweaks and take care of the matters where it matters. There are times where an engineer is appropriate.
An architect license allows that person who is licensed essentially an unlimited practice of architecture.
I suggest some level of codified recognition of building designers who are certified under a certification that its certification exam includes building codes, HSW subject matters and other pertinent subject matters relating to the domain of health, safety and welfare and competent design of buildings and structures. Although there is a technical legal recognition of unlicensed designers but there is some non-codified legal recognition in practice. I propose some codified recognition of those certified by a qualified certification program.
There are projects that are exempt that a certified professional building designer is competent to design but some people are not and that a building official could simply say, "come back to us with a set of plans prepared by or under the responsible supervision of a certified design professional or a registered design professional." In some instances, certain drawings should be prepared by an engineer and that would still be authorized.
This kind of diverges from the topic some but that is what I think we should have because most certified design professionals are professionals. Although, we are not undergoing a state licensure program but pursue 'self-regulation' through certification. I think it is an area the professions can explore together. Right now, architects competing with certified professional building designers are not a problem.
That is one way more legal recognition can be established without changing the licensing laws for architects or engineers and an added option for the building department when it comes to exempt project. When a project is required by statutes of the jurisdiction that requires an architect or engineer, then an architect or engineer is required for preparation of plans and other documents for such project.
Demographically, a certified professional building designer is more competent than those who are not certified (or licensed).
I do agree with you about the liability. In addition, it can also flip back because in Oregon, if I was an in an independent contractor relationship, I would still be liable for your work as well but it would be a joint liability scenario. If I was an employee, that's a different situation. If I contracted you to do certain design, I can still be liable. If I was certified, the certification would in the eyes of the court raise the bar and I wouldn't just be able to use ignorance as an excuse. I would be expected to be held to a higher standard of expectation.
What we would end up with is a joint liability scenario.
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