Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hire an architect, and they will figure out the structural engineer part. They will call someone in if they think it's necessary. We did a complicated renovation and they had to call in an engineer on a few items.
OP here. Would you recommend your architect?
Where are you located? What we found is for smaller projects, the bigger architect firms (espeically design/build) won't take it on as it's not worth it to them. Then you're best with a smaller firm like a one-man shop. I'd say the cut-off number is $100k in this area.
We are in McLean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hire an architect, and they will figure out the structural engineer part. They will call someone in if they think it's necessary. We did a complicated renovation and they had to call in an engineer on a few items.
OP here. Would you recommend your architect?
Where are you located? What we found is for smaller projects, the bigger architect firms (espeically design/build) won't take it on as it's not worth it to them. Then you're best with a smaller firm like a one-man shop. I'd say the cut-off number is $100k in this area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hire an architect, and they will figure out the structural engineer part. They will call someone in if they think it's necessary. We did a complicated renovation and they had to call in an engineer on a few items.
OP here. Would you recommend your architect?
Anonymous wrote:Hire an architect, and they will figure out the structural engineer part. They will call someone in if they think it's necessary. We did a complicated renovation and they had to call in an engineer on a few items.
Anonymous wrote:Are you planning on doing the work yourself or are you going to hire a licensed contractor?