Proven and Extensive Experience

  • Management

    We all manage tight budgets and schedules as an industry standard. Nonetheless, our approach stands out: Personalized and intimate with frequent communications based on good judgement tailored to our Clientele. Thorough diligence during pre-planning, pre-construction, construction and close-out is witness to successful outcomes.

  • Advisory

    We take your trust seriously, and want to make sure our advisory role is a facet you can completely rely on. Land use, lease review, development agreements, design efficiencies, and code implications are a few areas where we partner in an integrated manner with the Project Team.

  • Peer Review

    With a strong acumen in the design and technical domain, we delve into and examine design efficiencies, building code strategies, and master planning exercises for the best intents of the project. Repositioning strategies as part of adaptive reuse are involved, knowledge-backed tasks which we have done many of.

  • Execution

    Irrespective of the project phase, and the need to operate simultaneously on phases such as procurement, proposals, contract negotiations, and active construction, a dialed-in approach is vital every step of the way when orchestrating different project needs. Our goal is always to keep focus, and not over-commit as we take our “Standard of Care” earnestly.

  • Entitlements

    Jurisdictional particularities are unique. We understand them well and know when to prioritize elements of the process for cross-functional efficiencies for the success of the project, what may it be: Zoning ordinances, SEPA, EIS, various building permit types - Full review, Blanket and STFI to name a few. Working with City officials in a timely and perceptive manner is critical.

  • Sustainability

    Bold proponent we are of developing a decarbonization strategy alongside tracking and reporting sustainability initiatives to create a win-win for Our Clients and finite resources. Using renewable materials, reducing on-site waste, embodied energy, and energy consumption are a good start, but not enough for the pace at which our built-environment is changing.