The Request for Information is one of construction's most mundane documents and one of its most consequential. An average commercial construction project generates 300-500 RFIs. On complex projects — hospitals, data centers, high-rise residential — that number can exceed 1,000. Each RFI represents a gap between what the drawings show and what the field needs to know to build, and each unanswered RFI is a potential delay, change order, or dispute waiting to happen.

Despite their importance, RFI management on most projects is chaotic. RFIs get lost in email threads, responses take weeks instead of days, answers reach the wrong people (or nobody at all), and the documentation trail is too messy to be useful in dispute resolution. Here is how to fix that.

Why RFIs Matter More Than You Think

Beyond the obvious — clarifying design intent so you build the right thing — RFIs serve several critical functions that many GCs underappreciate:

The 7 Rules of Effective RFI Management

1. One Question Per RFI

The single most common RFI mistake is bundling multiple questions into a single RFI. "Please clarify the following 6 items on Sheet A301..." guarantees that the architect will answer 4 items, miss 1, and give a partial answer on the 6th. You will then need a follow-up RFI, adding another 7-14 days to the response cycle.

One RFI, one question. It is tracked independently, answered independently, and closed independently. Yes, this means more RFI numbers in your log. That is a feature, not a bug — it gives you granular tracking of every open design question.

2. Reference Specific Drawings and Specs

A vague RFI gets a vague answer — or no answer at all. Every RFI should reference:

The more specific your RFI, the faster and more accurate the response. Architects respond faster to clear questions because they do not need to spend time figuring out what you are asking about.

3. Include a Suggested Answer

This is the practice that separates good project engineers from great ones. When you submit an RFI, include your suggested resolution. "We propose to frame with 2x8 per the specification and disregard the detail on A301. Please confirm or advise."

Why does this work? Three reasons. First, it demonstrates that you understand the issue, which builds credibility with the design team. Second, it gives the architect something to react to, which is cognitively easier than generating an answer from scratch. Third, if the architect agrees with your suggestion, the response can be as simple as "Approved as suggested" — cutting response time from days to hours.

4. Set and Enforce Response Deadlines

Most construction contracts specify an RFI response timeframe — typically 7-14 calendar days. Yet most GCs treat this as aspirational rather than enforceable. The result is RFIs that sit in the architect's inbox for 3-4 weeks while work stalls.

Effective RFI management requires a three-tier escalation process:

  1. Day 7 (or contractual deadline): Automated reminder to the architect flagging the approaching deadline
  2. Day 10 (3 days overdue): Escalation email to the architect's principal and the owner's representative, noting the schedule impact of the delayed response
  3. Day 14 (7 days overdue): Formal notice letter documenting the delay and its impact on the project schedule, copied to the owner

This is not adversarial — it is professional. You are protecting the project schedule and creating the documentation trail that the contract requires. Most architects will respond quickly once they realize the GC is actually tracking deadlines and escalating overdue items.

5. Distribute Responses to All Affected Trades

An RFI response that reaches only the sub who asked the question is a failure. In construction, design clarifications almost always affect multiple trades. If the architect clarifies that a wall is load-bearing (not partition as originally assumed), that affects structural, framing, MEP penetrations, and potentially the schedule.

Every RFI response should be distributed to every trade that might be affected. This requires the project engineer to think about the implications of the response — not just file it and move on. Who else needs to know? What work might change? Are there schedule implications? This distribution step prevents the all-too-common scenario where one sub builds to the clarified design while another builds to the original (now superseded) drawings.

6. Track Schedule Impact Explicitly

Every RFI should include a schedule impact assessment. If the work that depends on this RFI response is 4 weeks away, the schedule impact is zero (assuming a timely response). If the work is imminent and crews are standing by, the schedule impact is measured in days or weeks of delay.

Documenting schedule impact at the time of RFI submission accomplishes two things: it helps the architect prioritize their response workload (schedule-critical RFIs first), and it creates the contemporaneous documentation you need for delay claims. A delay claim built on RFI logs with date-stamped schedule impact assessments is far more credible than one reconstructed after the fact.

7. Maintain a Living RFI Log

The RFI log is not a filing cabinet — it is a management tool. Review it weekly in your coordination meetings. Key metrics to track:

The Cost of Bad RFI Management

Research from the Construction Industry Institute estimates that each RFI costs between $1,000 and $3,000 in direct costs (labor to draft, review, and respond) and that the average RFI adds 1-2 days to the project schedule. On a project with 400 RFIs, even a 20% improvement in response time and quality represents significant schedule and cost savings.

But the real cost is not in the individual RFIs — it is in the cascading effects. A single late RFI response on a critical-path activity can generate weeks of delay that ripples through every downstream trade. When you multiply that across dozens of late responses over the life of a project, the cumulative schedule impact can be measured in months, not days.

Making It Sustainable

The challenge with RFI best practices is not knowing what to do — it is doing it consistently across every RFI on every project. The project engineer who manages 400 RFIs with perfect documentation, timely escalation, and comprehensive distribution is either superhuman or using tools that automate the repetitive parts.

That is where AI-powered RFI management becomes valuable: not as a replacement for engineering judgment (the AI does not decide what to ask the architect), but as a system that ensures every RFI is logged, tracked, escalated on schedule, distributed to the right people, and documented for the record. The human makes the decisions; the system makes sure nothing falls through the cracks.

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