Five Signs Your Architect Is Thinking Ahead of You

Client Guide

Five Signs Your Architect Is Thinking Ahead of You

Choices made early in construction, while the walls are still open, and how to tell your architect is making them for you.

Franco Albarran, Founder

Franco portrait

Your mirror and sconces can hang anywhere on the wall

You pick the mirror and wall sconces last.

By then the walls are closed, and a fixture can hang only where a stud falls.

Before the drywall went on, we covered the whole vanity wall in plywood.

The plywood backing let the mirror and sconces hang wherever they looked best.

You chose them at the end, and they went where you wanted.

A shower niche set deep in the wall

A shower niche holds your shampoo and soap.

Most are shallow, because a wall is only a few inches deep.

We framed one shower wall thicker, so the niche sits deeper and to one side.

You see a clean wall, and the niche is there when you reach for it.

The depth was set early, before any tile.

A dropped ceiling separates the kitchen and hides the vent

In an open plan, the kitchen, dining, and living areas run together with nothing to set them apart.

We dropped one kitchen ceiling over the cooktop to mark the area off.

The drop also solved a problem with the vent hood, which reached only eight and a half feet, by bringing the lower ceiling down to meet the hood.

One change fixed the layout and the vent at once.

Your bathroom is laid out around the drain lines

Moving a toilet means moving the main drain line, the most expensive change in a bathroom.

In one upstairs remodel, we put the toilet, tub, and shower on the wall where the drains already ran.

The vanity went on the opposite wall, which needed only water supply.

The layout followed the drains, so we tore out nothing structural.

Built-ins that open up for repairs later

Most built-in benches and islands are sealed shut when finished.

That works until a pipe leaks or wiring needs service, and the only way in is to take the piece apart.

On one project, the owner walked the house during framing and asked to open up a space we had planned to close, which meant running ductwork across the room.

We hid the ductwork in window-seat benches with lids that lift off, so it reaches from either side.

The benches look built-in, and they open when the ductwork needs work.

Frequently asked questions

How can I tell if my architect plans this far ahead?

Ask where your mirror and sconces will hang, where the shower valve will sit, and how someone would reach the plumbing inside an island later.

An architect who has built many homes will have the answers ready.

What happens if these get decided too late?

The fix means opening a finished wall or moving a pipe, which adds cost and time.

Settling them early, while the walls are open, keeps the work simple.

Do these choices cost more?

Early on, most cost little, like a sheet of plywood or a thicker wall.

They get expensive only when they are handled late.

None of these show up in a finished house.

They are settled in the months before construction, so by the time you move in, the house fits how you live.

Meet the Founder, Franco Albarran

The Design-Build Difference

I lead both the design and the build of every project.

The details you care about stay intact from first drawing through the final coat of paint.

Tell me about your site and what you're trying to build, and we'll take it from there.

Start with an introductory call