View Full Version : Building design costs
Arron
21st June 2018, 03:17 PM
We’re currently engaging a building designer to design our new home. We have interviewed two, actually one a building designer and the other an architect. We are very happy with the designer, however, I would like to reality check his fees before we go ahead, just by comparing with other recent jobs rather then wasting anybody else’s time by getting them to quote on jobs they are very unlikely to get.
So has anyone had a house designed in the recent past. If so, what did you pay?
Or is there a designer or builder out there able to give an opinion?
Further information which may be important. Location is Central Coast NSW. House is 4 bedroom, 4 bathroom, 2 storey, probably structural steel. I’m hoping to limit the build cost to $750,000, though there are indications I might be dreaming:C. Service required is from concept to construction certificate.
Ps. I know there are numerous (and amazingly contradictory) cost guidelines on the web, I just want to hear from people who have really done it.
Cheers
Arron
cava
21st June 2018, 03:57 PM
Had a house designed a few years ago, and from memory the design side alone came to circa $20,000.
The design was really good and a lot went into it, with many visits to the property and to ourselves by the design team. Quite impressed actually!
Beardy
21st June 2018, 09:57 PM
Aaron there is not really a standard price for designing a building. People charge what the market will pay for them. You can pay as little as $2,000 for a building designer to $100,000 plus for a well known sought after architect,
Where you sit in the equation is hard to gauge as it all depends on your needs and expectations, quality of architecture you are looking for and your overall budget and design restraints on the site that need to be addressed.
if you have a simple block of land and looking for more a project home style of product one of the cheaper building designers may suit your needs but as your requirements become more complex you might be looking for someone with a more innovative approach and artistic flair so it is difficult as there is no black and white answer. It is a case of finding the right fit for your needs and at a reasonable price, this can be difficult to do if you haven’t been through the process before
One thing I will tell you is that it doesn’t matter which end of the scale you end up with they are all hopeless at working to a budget, they really have no concept of the $$$ implications when they draw pretty lines on a piece of paper
I used to do a lot of design and construct new homes for clients in the 700k to $1.5million category and I had a few different designers/ architects that I engaged depending on the criteria I talked about above.
How do you intend on building it, are you owner building or putting the job out to tender? Or?
Arron
21st June 2018, 10:44 PM
Aaron there is not really a standard price for designing a building. People charge what the market will pay for them. You can pay as little as $2,000 for a building designer to $100,000 plus for a well known sought after architect,
Where you sit in the equation is hard to gauge as it all depends on your needs and expectations, quality of architecture you are looking for and your overall budget and design restraints on the site that need to be addressed.
if you have a simple block of land and looking for more a project home style of product one of the cheaper building designers may suit your needs but as your requirements become more complex you might be looking for someone with a more innovative approach and artistic flair so it is difficult as there is no black and white answer. It is a case of finding the right fit for your needs and at a reasonable price, this can be difficult to do if you haven’t been through the process before
One thing I will tell you is that it doesn’t matter which end of the scale you end up with they are all hopeless at working to a budget, they really have no concept of the $$$ implications when they draw pretty lines on a piece of paper
I used to do a lot of design and construct new homes for clients in the 700k to $1.5million category and I had a few different designers/ architects that I engaged depending on the criteria I talked about above.
How do you intend on building it, are you owner building or putting the job out to tender? Or?
Thanks Beardy. I realise it’s all different and all a range and very hard to be specific etc. Nonetheless, I need to deal with the issue, so I need to gain some comfort going forward that charges are in the ballpark. That’s why I was hoping to get some first hand accounts coupled with a brief description of what was involved and satisfaction with the process. With a couple of those on hand, I’ll gut feel it.
Basically, it’s a flat, level and very narrow block. Views out the front and to one side. Living rooms on top level to get the views. Knock down rebuild. Nothing unusual in the brief because we want the house aligned to common tastes, rather then something quirky and difficult to sell. I’d like a bit of good taste and flair going on at the front but otherwise nothing unique. Flexible, likeable and realistic clients to deal with. Because of these limitations I feel the place pretty much designs itself.
Currently we’re thinking do a fixed price contract to lock up stage,then owner build from there. Maybe, depends upon whether I’m up for the hassles. But I wouldn’t have thought this would affect the design process, or does it?
Anyway, thanks for the warning about inability to consider budget implications. I will need to keep that on track.
, and we will be checking with referees so will need to focus on this point.
Cheers
Arron
rwbuild
21st June 2018, 11:22 PM
I do design work up to council submission including BASIX. Average 4 bed double garage single storey $2000
Just finished one for a client, existing house single storey on fairly sloping block with major extension, highly detailed construction including certification of laminated timber beams (which I'm accredited to do), 5 different floor levels, cathedral ceilings floor to ridge 4.5m, main bed and parents retreat highest level, commercial grade double glazed windows and specified finishes. I spent 2 days taking site levels, lots of concept drawings for client assessment, taken 8 months in total. It was agreed do and charge final cost in excess of $10k. I keep a close eye on my yearly earnings so it doesn't impact on my pension so I cherry pick which jobs I take on.
This may give you some idea but as what Beardy said is spot on.
With regard to splitting between contract to lock up then complete as owner builder I think you better talk to Fair Trading, there are some real legal issues involved there and introduces some very trick areas of liability.
Arron
22nd June 2018, 12:23 AM
Thanks Ray
When you say ‘up to council submission’, does that mean up to the stage of construction certificate approval, and does it give the owner detailed plans from which builders can quote and build. I’m just asking because one website said it didn’t. It implied that after gaining the construction certificate, a very much more detailed set of plans should be drawn up, which were equal in cost to all the work up to an including gaining the construction certificate. I think it was Archicentre, but I can’t now refind it.
The quote I have received seems to mean that the plans submitted for construction certificate are the finished product, and suffient for any builder to work off. Big difference, roughly double the cost in the first case.
Thanks for the warning about owner building from LUS. One of many things I need to learn.
Cheers
Arron
Beardy
22nd June 2018, 01:17 AM
Thanks Beardy. I realise it’s all different and all a range and very hard to be specific etc. Nonetheless, I need to deal with the issue, so I need to gain some comfort going forward that charges are in the ballpark. That’s why I was hoping to get some first hand accounts coupled with a brief description of what was involved and satisfaction with the process. With a couple of those on hand, I’ll gut feel it.
Basically, it’s a flat, level and very narrow block. Views out the front and to one side. Living rooms on top level to get the views. Knock down rebuild. Nothing unusual in the brief because we want the house aligned to common tastes, rather then something quirky and difficult to sell. I’d like a bit of good taste and flair going on at the front but otherwise nothing unique. Flexible, likeable and realistic clients to deal with. Because of these limitations I feel the place pretty much designs itself.
Currently we’re thinking do a fixed price contract to lock up stage,then owner build from there. Maybe, depends upon whether I’m up for the hassles. But I wouldn’t have thought this would affect the design process, or does it?
Anyway, thanks for the warning about inability to consider budget implications. I will need to keep that on track.
, and we will be checking with referees so will need to focus on this point.
Cheers
Arron
Based on this suggest having a good look at some of the design and construct local builders. You should find some at the likes of a Homeworld type display village near your area.
You will likely find this to be the most cost effective way forward with the only better option being running with a standard design from a high volume builder.
Getting plans drawn and approved and then choosing a builder is a more expensive way to move forward and has many more pitfalls for the budget to bleed whereas a design and construct style contract is more efficient across all the design and construction aspects of the project with fixed pricing up front.
You initially mentioned structural steel so I thought you were planning on something more unique which is why I didn’t raise this option first.
I don’t know what you have been quoted but typically designers will break their fee structures into three areas.
1. Conscept design stage where sketch plans are prepared. A fixed fee for a client brief, a preliminary design prepared and then one or two amendment consultations after which hourly rate will be charged for further changes
2. Provide detailed plans suitable for DA / CC or CDC approval. A fixed fee
3. Prepare supporting documentation and lodge submission for approval. A fixed fee plus an hourly rate for any time spent conversing with council during the approval process
Some further options
-Preparing tender documents and receiving tenders from prospective builders
-Supervising and administering the building construction phase.
As Ray said, getting to lock up and finishing the build yourself is not really a viable option any more. You would need to do an owner builders course and your building will not have any home owners warranty which devalues it come sale time. Apart from that, unless you are going to physically complete most of the items left bar plumbing and electrical it will probably end up costing you more money going down this path anyway.
rwbuild
22nd June 2018, 01:48 AM
Thanks Ray
When you say ‘up to council submission’, does that mean up to the stage of construction certificate approval, and does it give the owner detailed plans from which builders can quote and build. I’m just asking because one website said it didn’t. It implied that after gaining the construction certificate, a very much more detailed set of plans should be drawn up, which were equal in cost to all the work up to an including gaining the construction certificate. I think it was Archicentre, but I can’t now refind it.
The quote I have received seems to mean that the plans submitted for construction certificate are the finished product, and suffient for any builder to work off. Big difference, roughly double the cost in the first case.
Thanks for the warning about owner building from LUS. One of many things I need to learn.
Cheers
Arron
When I do plans it is a complete set that a structural engineer can use for their part of the plans which is required for council to issue a construction certificate, you will need a site classification report also before the engineer can design the slab/footings, and the plans are complete so any builder can quote/tender, just be aware that you have to specify finishes, schedule of fittings/fixtures/styles, PC items, color schemes both internal and external also most councils now also require a basic landscape plan as well.
Archicentre is for upper/high end market or zoning/heritage sensitive projects, they are expensive.
Arron
22nd June 2018, 08:53 AM
Ok, thanks guys.
We did look at the project homes and discuss with both builders and other owners. We largely decided against it because we felt that by the time we made the mods from their plans to ours we would end up paying just as much as a custom build for a patch up job.
It’s not that we want anything better or more complicated then one of the better project homes.
It’s just that we want something different.
Other owners who had been down the same route said that the project home builders had rushed to accept the job, but then became rigid and difficult and the owners had to fight them all the way and didn’t end up getting what they wanted anyway.
We have been told that to get a better-then-basic specced project home on our block of the size we want would cost about $550,000. We have a couple of wants that aren’t in virtually any of their homes though - upside down double story, large balcony at front, a way to appreciate great views to side, driveway at side to existing garage to be retained, couple of car ports at rear. I would have thought that they could accommodate those extra requirements for an extra $200,000, but other owners said don’t go down this route. One or two of the project home builders, when declining the issue themselves, strongly advised us not to engage with their competitors on this basis as we will be subject to deceptive conduct.
It’s a shame, I would be perfectly happy with a nice double story project home as I see them at Homeworld, it’s just that we don’t want one of their suburban boxes sitting on our waterfront block (well, waterfront except for the road in front of us).
The thing about structural steel is that we would prefer the big spans steel can give us to give uninterrupted views and a nice, streamlined, maritime look to the place. However that’s really only at the front of the house and one half of one side. The rear half of the house no-ones going to see so it might just as well be a timberframed box. If it’s going to be too expensive than we have to be realistic and change our thinking. Maybe a timber framed home with a limited number of steel girders out the front to support the balconies is just as good. Or maybe the whole thing can be done in timber - I don’t know.
The problem is we really can’t get guidance on how much extra steel costs us. The architects/designers won’t estimate till they get deeper into the process and the local builders won’t comment outside the context of actually quoting on finished plans. It’s hard to go forward, except to accept the process and be subject to several expensive revisions or restarts of the design process.
Thanks for your comments anyway. I appreciate your guidance.
Cheers
Arron
Arron
22nd June 2018, 09:21 AM
Thinking about this further,
I don’t really understand the market.
We live in a coastal district where every second house gets some type of view and wants a house built accordingly.
However, going to homeworld, all the houses are suburban McMansions designed for modern suburbs of Sydney or The Hunter which are basically pretty ugly environments so the houses are designed to ‘look inward’, in effect.
i Guess the key differences with our area is that people want to preserve the views, appreciate outdoor living in the favourable climate, don’t actually want to give the best part of the house to their cars in the form of double garages at the front, want living rooms upstairs and don’t want an unfriendly streetscape as comes from a row of bluff-fronted houses.
So why are there not project homes designed for our situation? Or are there ? It’s a niche but it’s still a big market. Or is there someone who occupies some type of middle ground between suburban-box project home and nosebleed expensive custom build ? Is there someone else we should be talking to?
————————
Edit just reread Beardys post and note that he’s talking about ‘design and construct local builders’. Not entirely sure who they are but I will investigate them further.
Cheers
Arron
damian
22nd June 2018, 02:18 PM
If you want a project home to take advantage of a view look to the country builders. There are spec home builders in country areas that do that sort of thing. The trouble with the central coast is it's virtually a suburb of sidinee these days with all the rubbish that comes with that.
The reason most 2 storey houses have living downstairs and bedrooms up is because it's traditional. It also allows you to hide the mess from guests. Most women like that layout, so that's what they build. You want an "upside down" house. There are niche builders with those designs but as you say you are going to have to look.
The thing to watch with the cheapie spec home builders is they suck you in with low std prices then sting you to death with mods and upgrades. It's like jetstar etc, if you add luggage and a meal you're paying quantas prices but your stuck in a plane full of bogans that's unlikely to take off on time, or arrive at all. Do look at the dearer spec home builders, and talk to them about existing plans. Many of the higher ends ones have design services in house where you can have pretty much any floorplan you want and they will help develop it with you.
So look for quality spec home builders with a strong country presence. Last time I looked you would expect to pay $1500 sqm ish, might be more now.
I want to owner build if I ever find the right block, but I'm only doing that because I'm a crochety old sob who wants it done my way so I want to maintain control over the build throughout.
This is just my personal experience/prejudice. I absolutely would not let an architect any where near my house. They make everything twice as dear, half as useful and sting you a fortune for the privilege of having your home stuffed. Of course engineers and architects are like mongoose and cobra. We are always trying to make stuff efficient, cheap, functional and easy. They are a pack of... artists.... I've seen several friends go down that route despite my warnings (no one ever listens to me). The lucky ones paid them out and bailed early, the unlucky ones are still paying the mortgages and trying to live in the garbage houses they got stuck with... ask me and I'll tell you how I really feel.
Good luck. The CC is a beautiful part of the world and I have many friends down there.
Arron
22nd June 2018, 06:51 PM
Thanks for the perspective. We’ll look a bit wider.
Discussing it further with my wife today, we agreed that what would make us happy is
- modern minimalist front to the house - exterior, that is. We call it ‘maritime minimalist’.
- rest of the house on-one sees but the possums so just a serviceable timber framed rectangle is good
- inside we would be happy with ‘upper spec project home’ look. Nothing special.
Obviously, we don’t need an architect to deliver that. Any good building designer should be able to.
Interested to hear about the owner builder thing. I’m still uncertain about the OB after LUS, but will start a new thread on that presently, keep this one focused on the design stage.
Cheers
Arron
markkr
23rd June 2018, 10:53 AM
Hello Arron,
We did something similar. Paid architect for concept drawings. Then went to recommended local builder, whose design department took design through council, and to CC. Because of design changes, we ended up paying a bit more for that stage, though not unreasonable. Can't recall costs, but could probably dig them out, as it was five years ago.
I wanted specific passive solar features, including tilt and turn double glazed windows and SIPs externally. The build team admitted they were not familiar with either, so ended up with some relatively minor stuff ups, but overall the builder was OK, especially if house would be fairly conventional. They are based in Berry, but have office in Castle Hill.
I did the joinery for bathroom and kitchen cabinets after the build, then the plumber came back (included in price) to do final fix (bathrooms and kitchen separately). Took 18 months till kitchen was complete (pretty patient wife!) and no dramas with builder sending tradie back.
Don't know if they would work on Central Coast, but would be happy to recommend them for a conventional build. Since WWF is 'searchable' I won't name them here, but PM me if you're interested.
Cheers,
Mark
ian
24th June 2018, 04:09 PM
Discussing it further with my wife today, we agreed that what would make us happy is
- modern minimalist front to the house - exterior, that is. We call it ‘maritime minimalist’.
- rest of the house on-one sees but the possums so just a serviceable timber framed rectangle is good
- inside we would be happy with ‘upper spec project home’ look. Nothing special.
Obviously, we don’t need an architect to deliver that. Any good building designer should be able to.
I wouldn't be too sure about that.
questions I think you might want to consult an architect about include
where the entrance should be located
how the entrance should relate to the rest of the house, especially the stairs to the upper "impress the visitors" level. It might be desirable to make these wider than normal as they will get more traffic than is typical for stairs in a two level house. Perhaps they should be wide enough for two people to comfortably pass on them.
width and placement of any balconies on the upper level -- this will be your primary outdoor entertainment area as the back yard will probably be an extension of the bedrooms.
if you intend staying in the house till your end you might want to consider incorporating a lift near the entrance from the street, driveway or garage.
Perhaps a dumb waiter to gt groceries from the garage to the upper level kitchen.
how well do you want the the ‘maritime minimalist’ front of the house integrated with the rest of the structure?
You might describe this front facade as 'maritime minimalist' taking advantage of the views
https://i1.au.reastatic.net/1160x668-resize,extend,r=33,g=40,b=46/fb70c8645e11f1189dfea11c0bb82d646e9d34d3937a338eb09bbed5c3f6db14/main.jpg
Arron
24th June 2018, 05:00 PM
I think the building designer we interviewed can handle those issues - in fact he seemed to have a very much better grasp of them then the architect we also interviewed. His portfolio indicates likewise. As I mentioned in the op, we were very happy with him, we just wanted to hear about a few other jobs to reality check the fees before going ahead. You know the ‘get 3 quotes’ thing.
Anyway, offline we have been able to find 3 other couples who have recently built houses and now we’re confident his fees are nothing unusual.
So it’s on to the next step.
That is a sorry house. I think it’s a vanity build. It started as a nice design, then someone wanted to make a statement and ruined it.
This is my favourite, a restrained style - at least it would be if they toned down the garish stairway.
438100
Beardy
24th June 2018, 11:07 PM
Good to hear you are making progress with the design side of things
I don’t know if you are going the DA CC route or Complying development route but I suggest that once you have some plans sorted speak to a couple of builders for feedback on buildability and budget and maybe an engineer if there are any tricky aspects before seeking approval
Requesting changes later can get costly with council submission fees on top of drafting and engineering documentation changes
Arron
24th June 2018, 11:39 PM
Thanks. We’ll almost definitely be going the DA/CC route as we will want to stretch the envelope a bit re side setbacks.
My wife and I walked around looking at houses today and decided we really can’t see why we would need to build out of steel. I think I was misinformed. As we have a narrow block (12.5 mtrs) the spans we will need are not that great - other people seem to be doing more bold things with timber. Either way, I’m expeciting we will need engineers input.
Cheers
Arron
ian
25th June 2018, 03:22 AM
That is a sorry house. I think it’s a vanity build. It started as a nice design, then someone wanted to make a statement and ruined it.if you think the front is "sorry", you should see the "industrial chimneys" incorporated in the back. I'm sure that on paper they were supposed to be "sails", but to my eye they look more like chimneys.
This is my favourite, a restrained style - at least it would be if they toned down the garish stairway.
438100Is that BCA compliant?
where are the hand rails? But I'm sure any grandkids would enjoy rolling down the slope.
But seriously, take away the stairs and the lowest level and the canter-levered overhang could make a very nice entrance to the upper level.
Beardy
25th June 2018, 07:29 AM
Thanks. We’ll almost definitely be going the DA/CC route as we will want to stretch the envelope a bit re side setbacks.
My wife and I walked around looking at houses today and decided we really can’t see why we would need to build out of steel. I think I was misinformed. As we have a narrow block (12.5 mtrs) the spans we will need are not that great - other people seem to be doing more bold things with timber. Either way, I’m expeciting we will need engineers input.
Cheers
Arron
Maybe they were referring to steel stud not structural steel?
Timber frame is still the most economical particularly on two storey and a better frame in my opinion
But when there are big spans requiring larger section LVL beams or too big for timber steel is incorporated into a timber frame as it is cheaper than timber and can be archieved with a smaller sectional size
All of this is pretty standard and your engineer will provide details of any steel required and your frame and truss company will sort out the rest
damian
25th June 2018, 03:56 PM
Maybe they were referring to steel stud not structural steel?
Timber frame is still the most economical particularly on two storey and a better frame in my opinion
But when there are big spans requiring larger section LVL beams or too big for timber steel is incorporated into a timber frame as it is cheaper than timber and can be archieved with a smaller sectional size
All of this is pretty standard and your engineer will provide details of any steel required and your frame and truss company will sort out the rest
^^^ What he said. I'm a metalworker by trade and it'd be trivial for me to build a steel framed house. I'd never go steel unless it was absolutely necessary.
Also regarding the getting old comments: a stair lift is an order of magnitude cheaper than an elevator. Elevators cost a fortune to install and require signifigant ongoing inspections. If you can make do with a stairlift it will be much cheaper.
I've been studying colorbond cladding. By far the cheapest way to clad a home and has advantages in certain circumstances (like bushfire). So you can buy custom orb for about $11 sqm. I asked a salesman at lysaght for a rough idea on the cost for 150 sqm of their dominion product (the one I like most). $80 sqm. I needed to sit down. Nothing more complicated than a top hat but as soon as they use the "A" word everything triples....
DOMINIONâ„¢ | Lysaght (http://www.lysaght.com/products/dominion)
I'm thinking of shopping around sheetmetal shops to see if they could fold me some up without damaging the finish...
Mr Brush
25th June 2018, 06:17 PM
We went through a lot of this process the last time we built, and I'd just comment on a few of the points raised.
(1) If I had my time again (and we may be building again shortly), I'd go design engineer over architect any day. You are far more likely to end up with something functional that can actually be built. Unlike Europe, where architects have to get some practical trade building experience as part of the qualification process, we found architects here often have no clue about practical matters. Many silly errors made in their designs, then you end up paying them extra to fix their own stuff ups. With a bit of time and thought, the average person can come up with the sort of house design they want, sketch it up, and hand it off to a design engineer to turn into something a builder can work with.
(2) Our architect encouraged us to put our build out to tender, and this was a complete waste of time. When times are good, and builders have plenty of work (as now), you'll be lucky if you even get many responses to a tender. They don't need to tender for work. We sent ours out to 6 local builders, got 2 responses back, and one of those was a ludicrous "trying it on" price about $200,000 above the going rate. So.....only one valid response at a half-sensible price. When we queried one of the builders who didn't respond (one we were keen on using), he actually said that he'd either avoid jobs specified by architects altogether (!), or bump up his fixed price to cover all the inevitable extra work he knew he'd have to put in making an architect design work in the real world.
There are a couple of builders in NSW who sit somewhere between the Homeworld project builders and the full-on custom people. Many of these have their own internal design/drafting capability - Hotondo Homes comes to mind. We'll probably go down this path ourselves, as I have a very good idea of the design for our next (and likely last) house.
damian
27th June 2018, 07:16 PM
What he said ^^^
Yes Hotondo. I had a chat with them. They seemed very flexible, well worth a call.
truckjohn
28th June 2018, 01:05 AM
My experience is that your builder is the one who makes or breaks a project like this in real life. I think it's worth the time and effort to make contact with a well respected builder and go from there. Spend the time finding one or two who already does the sort of thing you are considering...
Builders often have "Design guys" on retainer who will sort out the particulars of what you want and what you want to change. Luckily - they have professional reputations and relationships with these fellows... And since the Builder hired the design fellow - that helps insulate you against spending a bunch of time and money redoing his errors.
The other advantage is that a good builder can help steer you into good ideas and away from things that look good but are traps/pitfalls.... They have done it as a day job for money for long enough that they know what works, what doesn't, and where the traps lie...
Leave the "Architect" work to very highly unique and custom sort of work.... A few people have commented that architecture isn't what it used to be... And I believe that is true... It's mostly a college program with little contact in actual building trades work until you graduate and hit "Real life"... "Building design" seems to go the other way - starting with the trades with the what's and how's and then working up to design from there....
ian
28th June 2018, 04:00 AM
Leave the "Architect" work to very highly unique and custom sort of work.... A few people have commented that architecture isn't what it used to be... And I believe that is true... It's mostly a college program with little contact in actual building trades work until you graduate and hit "Real life"... "Building design" seems to go the other way - starting with the trades with the what's and how's and then working up to design from there....
an anecdote (about 6 years ago) from an architect parent on my kid's soccer team -- his firm was sending the architectural documentation work off shore "to save money" to the detriment of young architects who used to learn what does and doesn't work by doing that sort of work.
Beardy
28th June 2018, 07:12 AM
My experience is that your builder is the one who makes or breaks a project like this in real life. I think it's worth the time and effort to make contact with a well respected builder and go from there. Spend the time finding one or two who already does the sort of thing you are considering...
Builders often have "Design guys" on retainer who will sort out the particulars of what you want and what you want to change. Luckily - they have professional reputations and relationships with these fellows... And since the Builder hired the design fellow - that helps insulate you against spending a bunch of time and money redoing his errors.
The other advantage is that a good builder can help steer you into good ideas and away from things that look good but are traps/pitfalls.... They have done it as a day job for money for long enough that they know what works, what doesn't, and where the traps lie...
Leave the "Architect" work to very highly unique and custom sort of work.... A few people have commented that architecture isn't what it used to be... And I believe that is true... It's mostly a college program with little contact in actual building trades work until you graduate and hit "Real life"... "Building design" seems to go the other way - starting with the trades with the what's and how's and then working up to design from there....
Halelujah truckjohn, you have seen the light! As a builder my pet hate is Architects.
The clients think they are God’s and hang off every word they say and everything the builder says is a lie. They draw and specify things that often don’t work and because the builder performs the work he is legally liable to rectify the issue at his cost. They are legally obliged to be an independent mediator between client and builder on architect administered contracts but as the client pays their fees they naturally sit on that side of the fence and are not going to tell the client they stuffed up.
I just watched from the sideline an expensive home ( over 6 million) being built by a younger less experienced builder and he did a pretty good job overall on what was an extremely difficult project, come to the end of the project when the client moves in and all those niggling little issues raise their head and annoy the client so the builders does not get paid his final payment as he is expected to fix it all, many of which are as a result of poor design and material selection but the architect of course is not going to admit that and pushes the problem in the builders lap to make the client happy which they ultimately cannot.The matter is now heading for the courts and he doesn’t know it yet but I suspect the builder will lose everything and be broke from the process. This is a commonly repeated pattern in the industry
It used to annoy me that I carried all the liability and seven year warranty but did not have a say in the process so I changed my business model to where I engaged all of the consultants including the architect and offered my clients a turnkey design and construct package. That way the building design benefited from getting architectural merit but I could direct/control them on better or more cost effective ways to achieve a similar or more practical result and head down a path that I was happier to warrant.
The problem for clients that are not experienced in building is to know the pitfalls in the process which is difficult if you have had not done it before. This was why I previously suggested getting a design done through a builder to control the overal budget and give you a clearer overall view of the process and expectations early in the process
Somebody has mentioned Hotondo which is the style of builder I was referring to, there will be many more in your area you will just need to find them. Homequest display village Kellyville has a number of these builders but I don’t know if any of them work in your area
Just a note from another thread Hotondo is a franchise so make if that what you will.
truckjohn
28th June 2018, 08:00 AM
Beardy,
I have run into the same so many times with industrial equipment and for-contract "Professional design consultant engineers"...
Often - they do a scope and a budget with their design... And you are lucky if they are in the ballpark to 50%..... 100.0000% of the time they are low... Never once high.... And everything that is impossible or wrong is a Change Order that I have to pay for out of my pocket as Client... I basically have to do all my own estimating to ensure I can get my budget submissions right to finish the projects properly... Literally - I have had these guys completely miss half the electrical or all the piping or leave out foundation work...... And nobody ever remembers controls integration... But the client always has to pay for that stuff...
I much prefer to hire the fabrication guys or mechanical/electrical contractors and make them hire out the engineering.... If it's wrong - they eat it.... But they know that - so they make sure their engineers and designers get it right in the first place... The contractor knows he is on the hook - so he makes sure his tradesmen verify everything is right..... That's why the choice of contractor is absolutely critical.... Probably the #1 thing determining whether the building project will be a success or not..
It's kinda like hiring a Framing guy, a Drywall guy, a Plumber, and a Painter all separately to come redo your bathroom.... Everybody gripes about everbody else - and wants to charge extra to "Undo that blankety blank's mistakes".... Hire one guy to do it all - and he can't complain and try to charge you extra because his idiot drywall guy drywalled over all the electric sockets and windows.... He is the one who hired his guys and he knows it....
Beardy
28th June 2018, 08:22 AM
Yes I have often wondered how the conversation goes when the Architect/ consultant tells the client that the tenders are all X percent, often millions above the clients original budget brief :o Many a project doesn’t get off the ground as a result although a lot has been spent on consultants fees.
i thought it was odd you used the phrase “drywall” and then I noted where you are from.
Cheers
rustynail
28th June 2018, 09:50 AM
Retired Central Coast builder. There are some excellent operators in the area, with a special flare for coastal work. If you want names send me a PM.
Arron
28th June 2018, 11:48 AM
Retired Central Coast builder. There are some excellent operators in the area, with a special flare for coastal work. If you want names send me a PM.
Pm sent
Cheers