Executive summary
60% engineering package and epc handoff is not just a drawing task. It is a controlled workflow that connects project inputs, owner requirements, utility requirements, equipment assumptions, discipline interfaces, QA/QC records, comments, and package readiness. When those records are scattered, qualified reviewers spend high-value time reconstructing context instead of resolving technical decisions.
PowerTwin is positioned as a human-in-the-loop workflow layer for the repeated administration around these reviews. It helps project teams structure assumptions, issue logs, drawing registers, comment-response records, and EPC handoff context while qualified professionals remain responsible for engineering judgment, code interpretation, approvals, permitting, and sealed deliverables.
Traditional workflow
A traditional 60% engineering package and EPC handoff workflow starts with project context and progressively moves from concept assumptions to review packages. Teams collect site inputs, owner requirements, utility requirements, equipment data, engineering standards, vendor information, and constraints. The work then moves through design-basis control, drawing preparation, interdisciplinary coordination, QA/QC review, comment response, and handoff readiness.
In practice, the administrative layer around the engineering work is often as difficult to control as the technical work itself. Assumptions may live in spreadsheets, emails, markups, CAD notes, study files, and meeting minutes. Review comments may be tracked by discipline or by package rather than by actual root assumption. Drawing and deliverable registers may be maintained manually. This creates extra coordination effort across 10%, 30%, 60%, IFC, and EPC handoff milestones.
For 60% engineering package and EPC handoff, useful workflow records should preserve the relationship between inputs, decisions, open items, reviewers, changes, and package status. Teams should be able to answer what changed, who owns the next action, which assumptions are unresolved, and whether the package is ready for external handoff. That clarity is what Axion software is designed to support.
Typical engineering deliverables
Useful deliverables and coordination artifacts often include the following records. The exact package varies by project, discipline, owner requirements, utility standards, AHJ requirements, and EPC scope.
- design-basis register
- assumptions register
- open items list
- drawing register
- deliverable register
- owner requirements tracker
- utility requirements tracker
- QA/QC log
- comment-response log
- EPC scope transfer summary
These deliverables are not isolated files. A design-basis register should connect to drawing status, issue logs, review comments, equipment assumptions, and handoff notes. When the connections are visible, reviewers can identify technical gaps earlier and package owners can avoid reassembling the same context across repeated milestones.
Where workflow bottlenecks happen
Power-project packages slow down when the review record is incomplete, even if the technical team understands the design direction. Typical bottlenecks include incomplete input data, late comments, shifting requirements, vendor changes, and unresolved cross-discipline dependencies.
- EPC handoffs slow down when assumptions, open items, comments, and drawing status are scattered.
- The 60% package often contains enough detail to create downstream commitments but may still include unresolved project risks.
- If responsibilities and open issues are unclear, EPC teams spend time rediscovering context instead of advancing execution.
These bottlenecks are especially costly before EPC handoff because unresolved assumptions become downstream scope risk. A team may know that an issue is open, but if the issue is not tied to the drawing register, owner comment, discipline owner, and next review checkpoint, the risk is harder to manage.
How PowerTwin fits into the workflow
PowerTwin helps organize the handoff layer around 10%, 30%, 60%, and IFC package workflows: design basis, assumption registers, open items, drawing registers, QA/QC logs, comment-response records, and package-readiness summaries. It supports cleaner handoffs without replacing qualified engineering review.
PowerTwin can act as a shared workflow memory for project inputs, assumption control, QA/QC issue logs, drawing registers, comment-response records, and package-readiness checks. It is most useful where project teams repeat similar administrative workflows across many assets, packages, and review milestones.
The platform should be used as review support. It does not seal, certify, permit, approve, or replace licensed professional engineering judgment. It helps qualified teams spend less time on repetitive coordination and more time on actual technical review.
Preparing for 60% engineering and EPC handoff
By the time a package approaches 60% engineering, many decisions are mature enough to affect procurement, construction planning, EPC scope transfer, and owner or utility expectations. The handoff is cleaner when the design basis, assumptions, drawing status, open items, risk register, utility requirements, owner requirements, and comment-response history are visible in one controlled workflow.
For 60% engineering package and EPC handoff, terms and records that should remain visible include 10% design package, 30% design package, 60% design package, IFC package, design basis, assumptions register, open items list, drawing register, deliverable register, owner requirements, utility requirements, QA/QC log, comment-response log, risk register, EPC scope transfer. PowerTwin can support that visibility by helping organize the administrative trail around the technical work. Savings and time reductions should be treated as workflow-dependent targets, not guaranteed project outcomes.
| Inputs | Project files, equipment data, owner requirements, utility requirements, vendor context, and 60% engineering package and EPC handoff assumptions. |
|---|---|
| Control records | Design basis, assumption register, drawing register, issue log, comment-response record, and open-items list. |
| Review | Qualified reviewers evaluate technical assumptions, exceptions, codes, standards, and package readiness. |
| Handoff | EPC, owner’s engineer, utility, and internal teams receive cleaner context around what is ready, what is open, and what changed. |
How teams can evaluate this workflow
Before requesting a workflow demo, teams can identify one recent package milestone and compare how assumptions, drawing status, comments, issues, and open decisions were tracked. Useful evaluation inputs include a sanitized design-basis register, a drawing list, a comment-response record, an open-items list, and a description of where the team spent avoidable coordination time.
During a PowerTwin walkthrough, those inputs can be translated into a structured workflow view. The goal is not to automate professional approval. The goal is to show where repeated administrative effort, package assembly, QA/QC tracking, and handoff context can be organized so qualified reviewers have better visibility earlier in the delivery cycle.
FAQ
What belongs in a 60% engineering package?
A 60% package typically includes controlled design-basis records, key drawings, equipment assumptions, open items, drawing and deliverable registers, QA/QC status, comment-response records, and handoff notes.
How does PowerTwin support EPC handoff?
PowerTwin can centralize assumptions, comments, issue logs, deliverable status, owner requirements, utility requirements, and handoff readiness.
What is the difference between 30% and 60% packages?
The 30% package usually establishes major assumptions and direction, while the 60% package provides more complete drawings, equipment context, and package-readiness details before execution scope is transferred.
Does Axion produce IFC packages automatically?
No. Axion supports workflow organization and deliverable preparation. IFC, permitting, and sealed deliverables require qualified professional review and approval.
Why is a comment-response register important?
It records what reviewers asked, how the team responded, who owns resolution, and what remains open before handoff.
Are savings guaranteed?
No. Savings depend on project complexity, input quality, review discipline, and team adoption.
Related workflow reading
Use these related Axion Articles and platform pages to understand the broader delivery system.
See how PowerTwin can support this workflow.
Bring one current bottleneck and Axion will walk through how PowerTwin can structure inputs, assumptions, QA/QC, drawing registers, and handoff readiness.
Request a PowerTwin workflow demo