anonymous283 wrote:Well according to that design hacks question you'd be wrong.
Owner-Contractor Agreement
The construction agreement typically identi es the parties and the architect, de nes the contractor’s scope of work by incorporating the construction drawings and speci ca- tions, states when the work will begin and when it is to be completed, states the amount the contractor will be paid or describes how that amount will be determined, and describes payment procedures. The agreement incorpo-
rates into the contract the conditions (general, supplementary, etc.) and any addenda or other documents. This may be done either by reference or by attaching the docu- ments to the agreement.
supplementary Conditions
General conditions typically must be adapted to suit the particular requirements of a speci c project. Supplementary conditions list such additions, deletions, or other changes to the general conditions. AIA Document A503–2007, Guide for Supplementary Condi- tions, is a resource for drafting them. The practice of making changes to general condi- tions in a separate set of supplementary conditions originated in the pre–computer age and is likely to decline as computers are increasingly used to generate contract documents. When general conditions are adapted by making changes directly in the general condi- tions document itself, a separate supplementary conditions document is unnecessary.
anonymous283 wrote:Sorry but that still doesn't answer the question. Why do I see the term supplementary conditions used in both contracts and in specifications? Isn't that just a little bit confusing? Can someone clarify?
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