📸 Photo Documentation Guide
Photos are your best evidence in disputes. A good photo program costs nothing but saves thousands.
Photos win disputes. When it's your word against theirs, timestamped photos prove what happened.
Why Photo Documentation Matters
| Situation | How Photos Help |
|---|---|
| Change orders | Prove conditions before work |
| Delay claims | Document weather, waiting |
| Quality disputes | Show work met standards |
| Safety incidents | Establish conditions |
| Progress billing | Support percent complete |
| Defect claims | Prove proper installation |
What to Photograph
Daily Progress
- Overall site conditions
- Work completed today
- Active work areas
- Weather conditions
Before/After
Always photograph BEFORE:
- Starting work in an area
- Demolition
- Covering/concealing work
- Owner-furnished items installed
Concealed Conditions
Critical — can never recreate:
- Underground utilities
- Below-slab conditions
- Inside walls before closing
- Above-ceiling conditions
- Waterproofing before backfill
Problems & Issues
- Damaged materials on arrival
- Defective work by others
- Design conflicts discovered
- Unsafe conditions
- Owner-caused delays
Deliveries
- Material condition on arrival
- Delivery tickets
- Storage location
- Any damage noted
Safety
- Daily site conditions
- Toolbox talk attendance
- PPE compliance
- Hazard corrections
- Incident scenes (after securing)
Photo Best Practices
Composition
Include context:
- Wide shot showing location
- Medium shot showing area
- Close-up showing detail
Reference points:
- Grid lines or column markers
- Floor levels
- Measuring tape for scale
- Date boards (for disputes)
Metadata
Modern phones capture automatically:
- Date and time
- GPS location
- Device info
Don't edit photos — Editing removes metadata and raises authenticity questions.
Naming & Organization
Consistent naming convention:
YYYY-MM-DD_Location_Description.jpg
2026-02-01_Level3-GridA_Conduit-rough.jpg
Organize by:
- Date (primary)
- Location (secondary)
- Category (optional)
Storage
- Back up immediately
- Cloud storage (don't rely on phone only)
- Organize as you go (not at project end)
- Maintain for life of project + retention period
Photo Frequency
Minimum Documentation
| Phase | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Demolition | Daily |
| Underground | Every inspection point |
| Structure | Daily during active work |
| MEP rough | Before cover |
| Finishes | Weekly + milestones |
| Closeout | Punch list items |
High-Risk Areas
Photograph more frequently:
- Work that will be concealed
- Complex coordination areas
- Owner-furnished items
- Areas with prior issues
- Expensive finishes
Special Situations
Incident Documentation
If an incident occurs:
- Ensure scene is safe
- Photograph before anything moves
- Wide, medium, and close-up shots
- Capture all relevant conditions
- Include date/time reference
- Preserve original files
Differing Site Conditions
Discovering unexpected conditions:
- Stop work immediately
- Photograph extensively
- Include scale reference
- Document location precisely
- Notify owner in writing
- Don't disturb until directed
Weather Events
Document weather impacts:
- Forecast vs. actual
- Time rain/snow started
- Conditions during event
- Aftermath and damage
- Crew standing by
Who Should Take Photos
Superintendent
- Daily overall progress
- Major milestones
- Issues and incidents
- Coordination points
Foremen
- Their crew's work
- Before/after for scope
- Quality checkpoints
- Trade-specific details
Project Engineer
- Inspection documentation
- Submittal verification
- Progress photos for billing
- Coordination issues
Photo Log
Maintain a log linking photos to:
- Date taken
- Location
- Description
- Related documents (RFI, CO, daily report)
- Who took it
Common Mistakes
❌ Not enough photos — When in doubt, shoot
❌ No context — Can't tell where photo was taken
❌ No backup — Phone lost = photos lost
❌ Waiting to organize — Impossible to sort 10,000 photos later
❌ Editing photos — Destroys credibility and metadata
❌ Missing concealed work — Can never recreate
Digital Tools
Basic (Phone)
- ✅ Always with you
- ✅ Auto metadata
- ❌ Hard to organize
- ❌ Mixed with personal photos
Photo Management Apps
- ✅ Auto organization
- ✅ Project-based storage
- ✅ Easy to share
- ✅ Searchable
Integrated Solutions
- ✅ Links to daily reports
- ✅ Automatic backup
- ✅ GPS tagging
- ✅ Report generation
Get Organized
Free Template: Download our photo log template.
Automatic Organization: BLDR Pro automatically organizes photos by project, date, and location with GPS tagging — plus links photos directly to daily reports and issues.