Regardless of how the project work is portioned out, administration of the work remains the responsibility of the Registered Design Professional (RDP) who is the Applicant of Record (Applicant) in responsible charge or has verified Code and Zoning compliance of the drawings and installations for the project. Although there may be some specific projects that do not involve architectural or structural work, which may be completed by other professionals, it is important that the RDP maintain control of the entire project.
This section contains a list of tasks that provide compliance with the Construction Codes and other regulations discussed in the Project Guidelines.
Provide ‘reference only’ documents of legal existing conditions. These will speed up the plan review process for work by reducing the back and forth comments and correspondence.
Show fire-rated walls on all architectural, mechanical, electrical, and deferred approval drawings, which will facilitate the plan review process.
Based on the project's scope of work, include all applicable Special/Progress Inspections and commissioning statement.
Minimize deferred submittals to the extent possible to avoid construction delays.
Although the Registered Design Professionals are only required to show the final construction documents, the Applicant of Record should stamp and sign all formal submittals to the Department to demonstrate he/she has exercised responsible charge as required.
Rooftop Greenhouse seeking floor area exemption requires Certification by the NYC City Planning Commission.
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Required Documents: Based on scope of work, supporting documents or deferred submittals must be completed in order to obtain a permit. The following may be required:
OER authorization – Coordination with ZR (E) designation requirements
FDNY – Rooftop access coordination, reference FC 504
CPC Certification
Tenant / Occupant Protection Plan
Transit Authority Approval
DOT Approval
Landmark approval
Public Design Commission Approval
Post Approval Amendments: If the approved work has substantive or significant changes, make sure to submit revised drawings and obtain a Post Approval Amendment.
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As-Built Submission: If the completed project has changes that are not considered as minor and requires an ‘As-Built’ submission, make sure to submit revised ‘As-Built’ drawings prior to project sign-off.
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