What To Decide Before Renovation Drawings
A planning article that helps clients understand sequence, constraints, and why early decisions save money.

A planning article that helps clients understand sequence, constraints, and why early decisions save money.
Name the rooms that carry the budget
Before drawings begin, decide where the project is allowed to be expensive. Kitchens, baths, built-ins, and exterior openings can quietly consume contingency if their role is vague.
Resolve adjacency before fixtures
Clients often want to choose taps and tile first. The better first question is how people move between rooms, where storage lands, what must be hidden, and which views deserve quiet.
Decide what cannot move
Structure, plumbing stacks, window rhythm, ceiling heights, and mechanical routes should be treated as design material. When constraints are named early, the room can become calmer instead of compromised.
Give drawings fewer maybes
Every unresolved finish or appliance creates a later decision under pressure. A good drawing set should carry material direction, fixture assumptions, lighting intent, and the few open questions that truly need pricing.
Hold a little room for field truth
Renovation always reveals something. Keep contingency for the wall that is not straight, the floor that needs repair, and the detail that should be adjusted once the house is open.