The biggest gap in Indian commercial MEP execution isn’t design; it’s coordination on the construction site. Beautiful Revit models meet imperfect site conditions, structural deviations, and contractors building from outdated drawings. This guide covers the practical MEP coordination workflow that keeps a project on schedule and on quality.
The handoff: design → site
Three deliverables flow from MEP designer to contractor:
1. Tender drawings (LOD 350) — coordinated with arch + structure
2. Equipment schedule + technical specifications — with manufacturer selections
3. BOQ + cost estimate — quantities + rates for tender
After tender award, contractor refines:
- Shop drawings (LOD 400) — fabrication-ready
- Equipment selection — actual brand + model
- Site coordination — interface with other contractors
On-site coordination challenges
1. Arch + struct deviations
Site conditions deviate from arch design — column shifts 50 mm, beam depth changes, slab opening missed. MEP must accommodate.
Mitigation: Weekly coordination meeting; MEP RFIs flagged early; revised drawings issued.
2. Multi-discipline interference
HVAC duct + plumbing pipe + electrical tray + sprinkler all routing in same ceiling void. Without coordination, conflicts at every floor.
Mitigation: Pre-construction Navisworks clash detection; post-construction site walkthroughs.
3. Contractor inexperience
Subcontractors trained on previous-generation systems; new technologies (VRF, DOAS, BAS) unfamiliar.
Mitigation: Manufacturer training sessions; supervised first-of-type install.
4. Material availability
Specified equipment substituted by contractor for cheaper/available alternative; performance differs.
Mitigation: Pre-approved alternates list; substitution review process.
Weekly coordination workflow
Standard 4-week project cycle:
Week 1: All-trades coordination meeting (architect, structure, MEP-A/B/C, all contractors)
- Review prior week’s RFIs
- New shop drawings reviewed
- Procurement updates
- Schedule check
Week 2-3: Field surveys + shop drawing approvals
- MEP designers + contractors walk current floor
- Site issues flagged + resolved
- Shop drawings reviewed within 5 working days
Week 4: RFI response + procurement check
- Outstanding RFIs closed
- Weekly progress report
- Photographic site documentation
Punch list management
Pre-handover punch list typically has 200-500 items per 5,000 m² project. Categorized:
- Major — affects functionality (must fix before handover)
- Minor — aesthetic / cosmetic (fix within 30 days post-handover)
- Information — documentation gaps (manuals, certificates)
Closure rate target: 90% of major items closed within 60 days; 100% within 90 days.
As-built drawings
The single most-skipped deliverable. As-built drawings show actual installed condition vs design.
What goes wrong without as-builts:
- Future maintenance teams can’t find isolation valves
- Future tenant fit-outs route over hidden services
- Insurance claims on damage can’t establish baseline
- Refurbishment teams duplicate work re-discovering existing services
Best practice:
- Markup tablet-based field updates (BIM 360, Procore)
- Photographic record at every concealment
- Final Revit model + 2D drawings reflect actual installation
- O&M manual references as-built drawings
Five common Indian site coordination mistakes
1. No central RFI tracker. Emails scattered across teams; no version history.
2. Subcontractors building from outdated drawings. Latest drawing not pushed to site within 24 hours.
3. No post-installation photography. Concealment drawings can’t be verified later.
4. Sequential construction without coordination. Plumber installs first; sprinkler then routes around; HVAC has no space left.
5. Punch list verbally, not written. Items disappear; client claims 6 months later.
Quick checklist
- [ ] Weekly all-trades coordination meeting scheduled
- [ ] RFI tracker with closure SLA (5 working days)
- [ ] Shop drawing review SLA (5 working days)
- [ ] Pre-construction Navisworks clash detection complete
- [ ] Manufacturer training scheduled for new technology
- [ ] Field-update tablets (BIM 360 or equivalent)
- [ ] Photographic record of every concealment
- [ ] As-built drawings updated within 30 days of milestone
- [ ] Punch list tracking with major/minor/info categorisation
- [ ] Insurance + handover documentation
References: BIM Forum LOD Specification 2024; ISO 19650:2018; NBC 2016 Pt 4 §A-3 (Quality Assurance); CSI MasterFormat (referenced framework).
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