HVAC and indoor air quality
Cooling, ventilation, condensate, controls, and service access terms that shape comfort, maintenance, and late rework risk.
A change order is a documented modification to the original construction contract that adjusts scope, schedule, or other contract terms. It typically arises when unforeseen conditions, design clarifications, regulatory updates, or client requests require revisions after work has begun. A change order usually describes the work to be added or omitted, any adjustments to time for completion, and any agreed adjustments to compensation; exact content and process depend on the contract language and project delivery method. Managing change orders is common practice to maintain project control and reduce disputes; clear documentation, timely communication, and defined approval workflows help preserve schedule and budget expectations.
Cooling, ventilation, condensate, controls, and service access terms that shape comfort, maintenance, and late rework risk.
Terms that connect load path, concrete cover, curing, formwork, joints, anchors, and slab movement to expensive structural rework.
Terms used to explain how water moves through roofs, wet areas, terraces, and site drainage before damage appears in finishes.
Glossary coverage for openings, plinths, climate exposure, glazing, and the outer edge where design intent meets rain, splash, and maintenance.
Terms that explain why visible finish failures usually start in hidden base layers, floor levels, joints, and tolerances.
Terms that connect testing, as-built records, manuals, and operator training to future maintenance cost and claim exposure.
Fan-assisted supply or extract air system used when natural airflow is not enough.
Cooling system with separated indoor and outdoor units connected by refrigerant and drain lines.
Barrier systems preventing water penetration.
Ground-level water management around the building.
Integrated testing and handover readiness checks.
Final record set showing what was actually installed, routed, adjusted, and handed over on site.
Water-shedding detail around windows and exterior doors that keeps rain out of the wall assembly.
Cleaning, leveling, priming, moisture control, and compatibility checks before finish materials are installed.
Continuous route by which gravity, wind, and other forces move through the structure into the foundation.
Distance between reinforcement and concrete surface that protects steel and helps structural performance.