TL;DR: The first 90 days move from kickoff and information-gathering into site analysis and schematic design — the phase where your project takes shape. Expect a project kickoff, a deep dive into your goals and site, early concept options, and regular check-ins. Your job: respond promptly, make decisions, and stay engaged.
📄 Table of Contents
Signing the agreement is the start, not the finish. The first three months are where a project’s direction is set, and they go far better when you know what’s coming. Here’s the typical arc on an Eastside residential project, drawn from our process across 800+ projects.
Weeks 1–2: Kickoff and information-gathering
The project opens with a kickoff meeting to align on goals, priorities, budget, and schedule. We confirm the program (the list of spaces and how you’ll use them), establish how we’ll communicate, and set expectations for decision turnaround. You’ll typically be asked to share or confirm:
- Your property survey and any existing drawings
- A finalized wish list with priorities
- Inspiration images and must-keep features
- Budget confirmation and any financing timing
This is also when we order any needed survey or existing-conditions documentation. The clearer the inputs now, the smoother everything downstream. Our guide to being a great client covers how to keep this phase moving.
Weeks 2–4: Site analysis and feasibility
Before designing, we study the site — zoning, lot coverage, setbacks, slope, sun path, views, and access. On the Eastside, municipal rules (Kirkland, Bellevue, Medina) and constraints like critical areas or shoreline regulations can shape what’s buildable. This analysis defines the envelope your design has to work within, and surfaces any issues early, while they’re cheap to solve.
Weeks 4–10: Schematic design
This is the heart of the first 90 days. In schematic design, we translate your goals into concrete options — rough floor plans, massing, and how the building sits on the lot. Expect:
- One or more concept options to react to
- Working sessions where we refine the direction together
- Trade-off discussions (space vs. budget, light vs. privacy)
- A preferred direction you sign off on before we add detail
Your engagement matters most here. Quick, clear feedback keeps momentum; long decision gaps stall the schedule. By the end of schematic design, you’ll have a layout and form you’re excited about and a clearer cost picture.
Throughout: communication rhythm
Good projects run on a predictable cadence — regular check-ins, a single point of contact, and documented decisions. You should always know what’s been decided, what’s pending your input, and what’s next. If you’re ever unsure, ask; clarity is part of the service.
What comes after the first 90 days
Once schematic design is approved, the project moves into design development (refining materials and details), then construction documents and permitting, and finally construction administration during the build. See the full arc in our project timeline guide and our design process.
How to be a great client
- Respond to questions and approvals promptly
- Make decisions and try not to reopen settled ones
- Keep all decision-makers aligned
- Raise concerns early, not after work is done
- Trust the process — early phases are loose by design
Thinking about starting a project? Talk to Piper Cole Architects and we’ll walk you through exactly what your first 90 days would look like.
FAQ
What happens right after you hire an architect? A kickoff meeting to align on goals, budget, and schedule, followed by information-gathering and site analysis before design begins.
How long does schematic design take? Typically 3–6 weeks for a residential project, depending on scope and how quickly decisions are made.
What’s expected of me as the client? Prompt responses and approvals, clear decisions, aligned decision-makers, and early communication of any concerns.
When will I see design options? Usually within the first several weeks, during schematic design, after site analysis is complete.
Sources consulted: AIA phases of design framework; City of Kirkland and City of Bellevue land-use/critical-areas guidance; Piper Cole Architects project process.
Ready to talk about your project?
Piper Cole Architects has designed 800+ Eastside projects since 2000. Get a free, no-pressure consultation with David Meade, AIA, NCARB.