When you hire someone to design your home, you’re not just paying for drawings. You’re paying for the knowledge behind those drawings — the understanding of how buildings actually get built, what things cost, and where problems occur. The gap between a designer with construction experience and one without can mean the difference between a smooth, on-budget build and a nightmare of variations, cost blowouts, and builder frustration.
A traditional draftsman or building designer without construction experience creates plans based on design principles, building codes, and documentation standards. They know how to draw a building. They know the regulations it needs to comply with. They produce plans that are technically correct.
But technical correctness and buildability are not the same thing.
A designer with construction experience — particularly someone who holds a builder’s licence — brings an additional layer of knowledge that fundamentally changes the quality of the documentation:
A designer without construction experience might specify a feature wall with a complex brick pattern because it looks great in the render. A designer with building experience knows that pattern will add $15,000 to the brickwork cost and suggests an alternative that achieves a similar visual impact for $3,000.
This happens constantly in building design. Every design decision has a cost implication, and designers who don’t understand construction costs can’t make cost-effective design decisions.
Some design details are straightforward to draw but extremely difficult or expensive to build. Common examples on the Gold Coast include:
A designer with building experience recognises these issues at the design stage and resolves them before they become expensive site problems.
Ask any builder on the Gold Coast what frustrates them most, and “incomplete plans” will be near the top of the list. Plans that lack sufficient detail, contain inconsistencies between drawings, or leave critical decisions to the builder create uncertainty — and builders price uncertainty with contingency.
A designer with construction experience produces documentation that:
Building materials come in standard sizes. Timber framing, steel beams, plasterboard sheets, brick courses, roof sheeting — all have standard dimensions. A designer who understands construction designs to these standards.
When a design doesn’t align with standard material sizes, everything costs more:
A construction-informed designer makes the standard sizes work within the design, achieving the same aesthetic result at a lower construction cost.
The difference between construction-informed design and design-only documentation is measurable in your builder’s quote:
When plans are thorough and buildable, builders encounter fewer surprises. Fewer surprises mean fewer variation claims. On average, well-documented projects have 3-5% in variations, while poorly documented projects can see 10-20% in variations — the difference on a $500,000 build is $25,000-$75,000.
When builders receive clear, complete documentation, they can price with confidence. Uncertain documentation leads to contingency pricing — builders add a margin to cover the unknowns. Thorough documentation eliminates that contingency, resulting in more competitive quotes.
Builders don’t have to stop and ask questions, wait for RFIs (Requests for Information), or make assumptions about unclear details. The build proceeds efficiently, reducing labour costs and time on site.
A home designed on a regular structural grid (standard beam and post spacings) costs less to engineer and build than one with irregular spacings. The difference might not be visible in the finished home, but it shows up in the engineering costs and the framing labour.
In a two-storey home, placing the upstairs bathroom directly above the downstairs bathroom (or kitchen) dramatically reduces plumbing costs. Water and waste pipes run vertically in one location rather than requiring long horizontal runs through the floor structure.
Custom windows can cost 2-3 times more than standard sizes for the same area of glass. A good designer achieves the desired aesthetic using standard or near-standard window sizes, saving thousands without compromising the design.
Every valley, hip, and ridge junction adds cost. A complex roofline with multiple levels, valleys, and changes of direction can cost 40-60% more than a simple roof over the same floor area. The best designers create visual interest with simple roof forms through clever use of scale, proportion, and material changes.
A builder needs to get materials, equipment, and trades to your site. A designer with construction experience considers:
Ignoring site access at the design stage can add significant cost during construction.
For a comprehensive guide, see our article on how to choose a building designer on the Gold Coast.
In Queensland, building licences and building design licences are separate. A professional who holds both a Builder’s Licence and a Building Design Licence has demonstrated competence in both fields. You can verify licence classes on the QBCC website.
Where did they work before starting their design practice? If they’ve spent years on building sites — as a carpenter, site supervisor, or builder — they bring practical knowledge that design-only professionals lack.
Builders know which designers produce good documentation. If a builder says “we love working from their plans,” that’s the strongest endorsement a designer can get.
Ask to see a sample set of working drawings — not the 3D renders, but the actual construction documentation. Look for:
Not necessarily. While their hourly rate may be higher, the total project cost (design + construction) is typically lower because the design is more cost-effective and the documentation reduces builder variations. The design fee is a small fraction of the total project cost — saving 5% on a $500,000 build ($25,000) easily justifies paying more for better design.
Technically, yes — builders solve documentation problems every day. But every problem they solve costs you money through variation claims, delays, and compromises. And some problems are too fundamental to fix on site — they require redesign, re-engineering, and re-approval.
A builder review of your plans before signing a contract can identify potential issues. Alternatively, a designer with construction experience can review and improve existing documentation. This is cheaper than discovering problems during construction.
It’s relatively uncommon, which is part of the value. Most building designers come from a design or drafting background. Those who also hold a builder’s licence represent a small percentage of the profession — they’ve worked in both design and construction and understand how the two connect.
The difference between a designer with construction experience and one without shows up in your builder’s quote, in the number of variations during construction, and in the overall cost and smoothness of your project. A dual-licensed professional who understands both design and construction bridges the gap between what looks good on paper and what works in the real world.
When you’re investing hundreds of thousands of dollars in a building project, the quality of your documentation is one of the most impactful factors in your total cost — and construction experience is what makes documentation truly buildable.
Design Science is led by David Steadman, who holds both a Builder’s Licence and a Building Design Licence in Queensland. With a qualified architect also on the team, Design Science combines professional design capability with hands-on construction knowledge. Book a $280 consultation to see the difference construction-informed design makes.