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Heather Medina, Principal Architect and Owner of ArchiDev Studio, professional headshot
Heather Medina
Jan 11, 2022
5 min read
Woman in glasses working on a laptop at a wooden desk in a bright room with a large window and indoor plant.

Successful real estate development is not linear-but it is methodical. While phases often overlap for efficiency, experienced developers understand that each stage serves a distinct purpose: reducing risk, validating feasibility, and protecting project economics.

Below is a high-level overview of the architectural project development process as we apply it to multifamily and mixed-use projects throughout California.

1. Pre-Design: Feasibility Before Form

Pre-Design is where projects are either set up for success or quietly fail later.

This phase focuses on:

For developers, Pre-Design is less about drawings and more about answering one question early: Does this site support the yield and economics required to proceed?

A disciplined Pre-Design phase prevents over-design, entitlement surprises, and unnecessary sunk costs.

2. Schematic Design: Converting Yield into a Real Project

Schematic Design translates feasibility into a buildable concept.

Key outcomes include:

This is typically the phase where entitlement strategy is locked in. Advancing too far before entitlements are resolved can create redesign risk and unnecessary fees-especially on discretionary or density-driven projects.

3. Design Development: Coordination, Compliance, and Cost Control

Design Development is where the project becomes real enough to price accurately.

During this phase:

This is also the optimal time to engage a General Contractor for pre-construction services, allowing pricing, logistics, and sequencing to inform final design decisions.

4. Construction Documents: From Design to Permit-Ready

Construction Documents translate intent into fully coordinated, permit-ready drawings.

This phase includes:

Permitting often begins before documents are 100% complete, allowing review and documentation to progress in parallel and reduce overall timelines.

5. Bidding and Negotiation: Aligning Scope, Price, and Risk

Once documents are complete:

Well-documented drawings and disciplined review cycles are critical to obtaining accurate bids and predictable construction outcomes.

6. Construction Administration: Protecting the Project in the Field

Construction Administration ensures the project is built as intended.

The architect's role includes:

This phase protects the owner by ensuring quality, compliance, and clear communication between all parties.

7. Close-Out and Post-Occupancy: Completing the Lifecycle

Project close-out includes:

Post-occupancy services may include performance reviews, warranty coordination, and system optimization-ensuring the building operates as intended beyond construction.

Why Process Discipline Matters

For developers, architectural process is not academic-it is risk management.

A well-run project:

At ArchiDev Studio, our role extends beyond producing drawings-we help developers navigate complexity, protect yield, and execute projects with clarity.

Every site is different. We provide site-specific feasibility and entitlement strategy to determine the most effective development pathway before design fees escalate.