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    Impressive Sketchup House model needed

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Corner Bar
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    • GaieusG Offline
      Gaieus
      last edited by

      Yeah, true. Me neither. I am mean like this 😡

      Gai...

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      • K Offline
        kwistenbiebel
        last edited by

        He he 😄

        Your post turned a smile on my face Jackson.
        <Group hug mode:on >

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        • L Offline
          linea
          last edited by

          Jackson, that explains things very well. I really hope that Ken, if you are still reading this post you continue to join in the banter here.

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          • StinkieS Offline
            Stinkie
            last edited by

            @jackson said:

            I read this whole thread, am familiar with almost all of the contributers and can assure you that there's not one mean-spirited character amongst them

            Feisty bunch, though. 😉

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            • pbacotP Offline
              pbacot
              last edited by

              Good post, Jackson.

              And this has nothing to do with the original thread, but in response to your post.

              I would add that if you compare the cost of construction, engineering, financing, and the life of the building, a low architect's fee means nothing in the overall project. It is simply the first cost the client sees. So with this low fee, the architect might actually conceive something nice, but not manage to develop the design or document and administer the construction properly. So anything you save on fees will cost many times over in change orders and a substandard building. It's pound-foolish and penny-wise to coin a phrase.

              MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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              • T Offline
                toxicvoxel
                last edited by

                There is some dispute over whether these words are those of John Ruskin but they sum up an age old truth that will remain long after this debate is gone:

                @unknownuser said:

                “There is hardly anything in the world that some man cannot make a little worse and sell a little cheaper, and the people who consider price only are this man's lawful prey.”

                .

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                • D Offline
                  Double Espresso
                  last edited by

                  @toxicvoxel said:

                  There is some dispute over whether these words are those of John Ruskin but they sum up an age old truth that will remain long after this debate is gone:

                  @unknownuser said:

                  “There is hardly anything in the world that some man cannot make a little worse and sell a little cheaper, and the people who consider price only are this man's lawful prey.”

                  .

                  Conversely... 'There is nothing in this world that someone cannot make better and cheaper...

                  We live in a consumer driven 'free market' society that is out of control. Jackson's post was well stated, however, Architects are not the only ones who suffer from this dilema. Anyone who provides a service or manufactures a product is prone to price cutting. Consider the small storekeeper who is driven out of business by Wallmart, or the manufacturer who cannot compete with foreign child labor and low costs. Who is to blame when people cannot make ends meet and are forced to buy cheap goods and who among us is not guilty. It is easy to blame someone like Kent, however, my question is, if he agreed to pay someone on this forum who has criticized him for the model, would that person then take the money and use it to purchase 'fair trade' or just go looking for a bargain?

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                  • T Offline
                    toxicvoxel
                    last edited by

                    @unknownuser said:

                    Conversely... 'There is nothing in this world that someone cannot make better and cheaper...

                    I do not believe that this statement holds true for the services provided by architects or any other design discipline for that matter.

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                    • soloS Offline
                      solo
                      last edited by

                      I believe it should read "better OR cheaper"

                      http://www.solos-art.com

                      If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                      • Gus RG Offline
                        Gus R
                        last edited by

                        Architecture is not immune from competitive pricing although in that field it is frowned upon and advertising of said prices is generally illegal in many states. If a client is seeking the services of either an architect or home designer and has limited funds (we are after all in a serious recession with some deflation) they will be drawn towards a fee that they can afford.

                        Higher pricing does not equate to higher quality in the service industry. This is not only true with architecture but in medicine, auto repair, law, etc. Freebies and undercutting your competitors fees is a fact of life and I have seen this done for the past 24 years – although I have never done anything for free nor made a conscious decision to charge less than my competitors.

                        www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

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                        • S Offline
                          sepo
                          last edited by

                          My experience with cut prices is just an oposite. I beleive there is no such a thing as "free lunch" as we say. In construction industry I have seen so many times people undercut the the price of contract only to get the contract. Next step is than letter after letter trying to change this and that , claiming faults etc., demanding more money and applying pressure hoping to brake you down.
                          You cannot get Aston Martin and hoping to pay price of Skoda. It is just not possible.

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                          • Al HartA Offline
                            Al Hart
                            last edited by

                            @solo said:

                            I believe it should read "better OR cheaper"

                            I think you might have missed the point "Better AND Cheaper"

                            In my business, (Software), once someone creates a piece of software, we can make something better and cheaper because the first developer already did the work to design the concept, flow and user interface.

                            It is then easy to make improvements and create a similar capability without having to learn from all the mistakes the first developer had to learn from and discard.

                            Al Hart

                            http:wiki.renderplus.comimageseefRender_plus_colored30x30%29.PNG
                            IRender nXt from Render Plus

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                            • soloS Offline
                              solo
                              last edited by

                              Ah! Point taken. 👍

                              http://www.solos-art.com

                              If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                              • W Offline
                                wmanning
                                last edited by

                                Great thread, but I'm surprised with all the talk about any work being offered for free as being wrong, that no-one has mentioned how much benefit people are getting from this free forum, from free ruby scripts, and even free SketchUp.

                                I think it was Ross some pages back who mentioned it could be of benefit to vanity or someone with a packaged houseplans business. For someone selling houseplans online, all it would take is one sale based on this to make it worthwhile to them.

                                Isn't it better to receive the offer, than not at all?

                                I agree that doing bespoke work from a professional architect almost certainly sends the wrong message. That seems like a different issue though. I'd love to see what academic research says about client perceptions of fees and pricing structure by architects. Might make for another interesting thread...

                                William

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                                • J Offline
                                  Jackson
                                  last edited by

                                  The Royal Institute of British Architects has undertaken a lot of excellent research and reading on the subject; search results for "fees" came up with 819 hits. They can be found here. Hit #1 is (as you would expect) of particular relevance regarding the relationship between fees and design quality. It can be found here.

                                  Jackson

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                                  • R Offline
                                    remus
                                    last edited by

                                    Cheers for the links jackson, some interesting reading there.

                                    http://remusrendering.wordpress.com/

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                                    • D Offline
                                      Double Espresso
                                      last edited by

                                      Architects, lawyers, doctors, investment bankers, plumbers, gardeners, cobblers..., there are good ones, mediocre ones, and downright bad ones. Some charge high fees, some charge low fees. Caveat emptor.

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                                      • S Offline
                                        sepo
                                        last edited by

                                        I have not yet met great architect or product designer charging low fees. Great design demands considerate approach and a lot of testing which require time. It is as simple as that....
                                        You might go easy on that coffee mate 😉 Every time I see your avatar I go and switch on my espresso machine.

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                                        • DanielD Offline
                                          Daniel
                                          last edited by

                                          Interesting thread. It has been my experience that many if not most clients do not understand what architects do, and therefore don't understand why our fees seem so high. After all, how long does it take to draw a building? They don't see the many hours of coordination, code and zoning research, meetings, and not to mention the act of designing itself. All they see is a final set of drawings, which by themselves may not have taken that long to execute. This is especially true with residential clients. The proliferation of house plan books doesn't help, either.

                                          My avatar is an anachronism.

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                                          • soloS Offline
                                            solo
                                            last edited by

                                            These do not help much either.

                                            http://i2.iofferphoto.com/img/item/507/105/11/Home_Design_Architectural_Series_4000_v10.jpg

                                            http://www.solos-art.com

                                            If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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