03/19/2026
This was posted on Linkedin by Dave Stephens of Lida group in Canada LIDA Homes . this rings true of our philosophy here at Cramer E Construction. Let us help you design your dreams!
The architect and builder need to be working together from the start, or the client will pay for it later.
Not in theory. In real dollars, time, and frustration.
I've seen it. Design completed in isolation, then handed to a builder to price. On paper, it looked exceptional. Clean lines. Strong layout. Everything the client thought they wanted.
Then the numbers came back.
Structural details unresolved. Materials specified with no regard for lead times or installation constraints. The budget wasn't off by a little. It was off by enough to force a redesign.
One project. Six months of lost time and $42,000 in redesign fees. Not because the architect wasn't talented. Not because the builder wasn't capable. Because they weren't talking to each other early enough.
Now the client is building a different project than the one they approved.
Features cut. Details simplified. Decisions rushed. What started as a cohesive design becomes a series of adjustments just trying to salvage the original vision.
That situation isn't a design problem. And it isn't a construction problem. It's a collaboration problem.
Architects and builders approach a project from different angles. One focused on space, form, and feel. The other on cost, sequencing, and how the home actually gets built. When they operate separately, gaps form.
Those gaps later become change orders, delays, and decisions that were avoided.
The projects that run well look different from the beginning.
Respect on both sides. Real conversations before anything is locked in. The builder is involved during design, not after it. The architect understands how decisions affect cost before they're committed.
That's what real collaboration looks like.
It's not about control. It's about alignment.
When that alignment exists, the design holds. The budget is more accurate. The build runs cleaner. And the client moves through the process with clarity instead of constant course correction.
You don't see that collaboration in the finished photos. You see it in everything that didn't have to be fixed along the way.
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