I'm sold on the idea of retaining an architect and structural engineer during a self build
In an ideal world, it would be great to have an architect and structural engineer on site at all times during a build, to iron out any problems before they happen, to supervise everything in real time.
But in the real world, architects and structural engineers come at stages during the build, and it might be too late to iron out mistakes which were made (or indeed hidden by the builder)
I was watching grand designs recently, there was an hands on architect who was helping to get the house airtight by rolling up his sleves and applying some membrane and at the same time closely supervising the other builders, I'd love to employ an architect like that.
But the question I really have is what are the key moments in a build where an architect / structural engineer need to on site supervising the build.
In an ideal world, it would be great to have an architect and structural engineer on site at all times during a build, to iron out any problems before they happen, to supervise everything in real time.
But in the real world, architects and structural engineers come at stages during the build, and it might be too late to iron out mistakes which were made (or indeed hidden by the builder)
I was watching grand designs recently, there was an hands on architect who was helping to get the house airtight by rolling up his sleves and applying some membrane and at the same time closely supervising the other builders, I'd love to employ an architect like that.
But the question I really have is what are the key moments in a build where an architect / structural engineer need to on site supervising the build.