Before You Fund the Design

Design Feasibility Audit

Before you fund the design, find out what breaks. An independent read on feasibility, budget, and execution risk — from someone sitting on your side of the table.

You have plans. An architect's vision, a designer's renderings, a contractor's bid. What you don't have is someone on your side of the table telling you whether it survives contact with reality.

That's the audit.

What you get

  • A line-by-line feasibility review of the design against your actual budget, site, and timeline. I know what $3 million plans look like when you only have $650,000 — and I'll tell you which one you're holding.
  • A written risk memo: where the design breaks, what it really costs, what's missing, what's sequenced wrong, and what to renegotiate before you sign.
  • A one-hour readout call to walk the memo, answer questions, and hand you the exact language to take back to your design team.

Fixed scope. Fixed price. No obligation beyond it.

What happens after

Most audits end with the memo — you take it and run. When a design needs rework, that's a separate engagement: I can redesign the scope myself or coordinate your team through the fix, on your side of the table the whole way.

Who this is for

  • Owners holding a design they're about to fund
  • Developers pressure-testing a pro forma against real construction costs
  • Investors who want an independent read before committing capital
  • Anyone whose architect, builder, and budget are telling three different stories

Why me

17 years across design, construction, and operations. Every role from labor to principal designer. State buildings, universities, private estates, commercial development — across Texas, North Carolina, Colorado, Arizona, and Hawaii. I've seen how projects break. The audit is that pattern recognition, on paper, before it costs you.

serious inquiries

Get the design audited
before you fund it.

Book Your Audit