Comparison Guide
Alternative to a Traditional General Contractor
If you want more design leadership and earlier coordination, an architect-led design-build alternative can be a better fit than a traditional GC-led path.

Side-by-side view
Use this table to understand the structure of each path before thinking about style or finish level.
| Topic | Option A | Option B |
|---|---|---|
| Primary value | Tighter alignment between design intent and build execution | Construction management after design is mostly set |
| Best for | Owners who want one coordinated planning path | Owners who are comfortable stitching together separate stages |
| Common pain point | Requires choosing the right integrated team | Can create disconnects between design, price, and field decisions |
| Outcome focus | Architecture, cost, and buildability move together | Efficiency depends heavily on late-stage coordination |
What usually matters most
The best fit depends on complexity, communication style, and how much coordination you want happening early
If you want more design leadership and earlier coordination, an architect-led design-build alternative can be a better fit than a traditional GC-led path.
No process is automatically right for every owner. The goal is to choose the structure that gives your project the best chance of staying coherent from concept through construction.

Talk through the tradeoffs with a real project in mind
Share your property, your goals, and where you feel uncertainty. We will help you understand which path makes the most sense for your situation.
- Property status and project type
- Any team members already involved
- Questions about design quality, pricing, or execution
