06/02/2026
Why Early Construction Coordination for Signage Matters
Signage isn’t a cosmetic afterthought at the end of a commercial build. It’s a critical, engineered component of the project that impacts power, structure, costs, schedules, subcontractor sequencing, and long-term performance.
That’s why robust, early collaboration between the general contractor, construction team, and the sign provider must happen before the first permit gets pulled.
Here’s what proactive coordination helps avoid:
Power & Electrical Planning – Illuminated signs require power access that must be roughed in early. Waiting until the walls are buttoned up can create costly change orders and delays.
Blocking & Structural Supports – Channel letters, monument signs, and other elements need engineered support in walls or foundations. If these provisions aren’t built into the structure, retrofitting becomes expensive and time-consuming.
Engineering & Permitting – Most municipalities treat signage separately from the main building permit. Early sign input ensures the design complies with structural, electrical, and zoning requirements, and gets approved without hold-ups.
Lighting & Visibility Constraints – Sign location, brightness, color temp and sightlines need planning alongside canopy, façade, and site lighting design… not after they’re baked in.
Subcontractor Coordination – Signage impacts multiple trades (electricians, metal fabricators, glazers). Early engagement minimizes trade conflicts and tight timeline squeezes.
Realistic Budgeting – Custom signs aren’t off-the-shelf products. Lead times, materials, engineering, and installation all have cost implications that are best accounted for early in the budget cycle.
At the end of the day, bringing signage into the construction planning conversation early doesn’t slow you down. It smooths scheduling and keeps projects on schedule, on budget, and aligned with design intent.
If you’re managing a commercial build, think of your sign partner not as a last-minute detail but as a project stakeholder from the start. Let’s build better together.