Communication infrastructure for practices that have outgrown ad-hoc.
We build communication systems for architecture practices: the workflows, templates, and visual-language frameworks that let a studio produce consistent, well-made work across offices, project types, and pitch cycles, without reinventing the answer each time. The goal is a studio whose voice reads the same whether the project is a competition bid, a private commission, or a published article.
This is work for boutique studios of five to thirty people who have stopped being able to hold design communication in one person's head, and for larger practices where offices have drifted into different houses of taste. We have run this engagement end-to-end for a global architecture practice, diagnosing where communication was breaking down, proposing a narrative framework as infrastructure, and setting out how creative direction could be held across a studio network.
A typical engagement covers: a diagnostic of current practice and outsourcing patterns; a written framework for what good communication looks like for the studio (understandable, beautiful, ingenious, transferable); modular narrative components that recombine for competitions, client work, and public-facing material; and the templates, asset systems, and shared references that make the framework usable on Monday morning.