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Working with a Building Designer: What to Expect at Each Stage

March 06, 2026 1 By: David Steadman

If you’ve never worked with a building designer before, the process can feel unclear. What happens at each stage? How long does it take? What decisions will you need to make? This guide walks you through the typical building design process on the Gold Coast from first phone call to plans in hand.

Stage 1: Initial Enquiry and Consultation

What happens

The process starts with a phone call or email to discuss your project at a high level. The designer wants to understand what you’re looking to achieve — new home, renovation, extension — your approximate budget, your timeline, and your property location.

If the project is a good fit, you’ll book a consultation. On the Gold Coast, most designers charge a consultation fee ranging from $200-$500. This fee typically covers a site visit and an in-depth discussion about your project. See our guide on building designer costs for more detail on fees.

What you should prepare

Before the consultation, gather:

  • Your property address and any existing plans (if you have them)
  • A list of what you want — number of bedrooms, living areas, outdoor spaces
  • Photos or Pinterest boards of homes and styles you like
  • Your construction budget (be honest — this helps the designer design to your budget)
  • Your timeline — when do you want to start building?
  • Any known site issues (flooding, steep slope, heritage, easements)

What to expect from a good consultation

A thorough consultation should cover:

  • Site assessment — the designer visits your property, assesses the block’s orientation, slope, views, vegetation, and neighbours
  • Brief discussion — what you want, how you live, what matters most to you
  • Budget reality check — the designer gives you an honest assessment of whether your budget matches your expectations
  • Process overview — how the design will unfold, what consultants are needed, approximate timeline
  • Fee estimate — what the design will cost and how payments are structured

A great designer will ask as many questions as they answer. They’re trying to understand you, your lifestyle, and your priorities — not just your room count.

Stage 2: Concept Design

What happens

This is the creative stage where your project starts taking shape on paper (or screen). Based on your brief and the site analysis, the designer produces initial concept plans — typically floor plans and basic elevations showing the overall layout, room sizes, and spatial relationships.

Most designers present 1-2 concept options for you to review. These aren’t detailed construction drawings — they’re design explorations that test different approaches to your brief.

What you’ll see

  • Preliminary floor plans (to scale, with room labels and approximate dimensions)
  • Basic elevations (front and rear at minimum)
  • Site plan showing the building on your block
  • 3D model or perspective views (most Gold Coast designers now include this)

What decisions you’ll make

This is where you provide feedback:

  • Does the layout flow the way you imagined?
  • Are the room sizes right?
  • Is the relationship between indoor and outdoor spaces working?
  • Does the street presentation match your vision?
  • Are there any rooms or features missing?

Expect 2-3 rounds of revisions at this stage. Good designers welcome feedback — it’s how the design gets refined. Don’t feel bad about asking for changes. This is far cheaper to change on paper than during construction.

How long it takes

Concept design typically takes 3-4 weeks, including revision rounds. The biggest variable is how quickly you provide feedback. Designers can’t progress until you’ve reviewed and approved the concept direction.

Stage 3: Design Development

What happens

Once you’ve approved the concept, the designer develops it into a more detailed design. This is where dimensions are locked in, construction methods are considered, and the design is tested against council requirements.

What you’ll see

  • Fully dimensioned floor plans
  • All elevations (front, rear, and both sides)
  • Sections (cross-cuts through the building showing internal heights and relationships)
  • Detailed 3D model with material selections
  • Preliminary specifications (what materials will be used)
  • Council compliance check (setbacks, height, site cover)

What decisions you’ll make

  • Material selections (external cladding, roofing, window types)
  • Kitchen and bathroom layouts (general arrangement, not detailed fixtures yet)
  • Floor finishes (tiles, timber, carpet — by area)
  • Ceiling heights
  • Any special features (feature walls, voids, skylights)

How long it takes

Design development typically takes 2-3 weeks. Again, turnaround of your feedback is the main variable.

Stage 4: Construction Documentation

What happens

This is the technical stage where the design is converted into drawings and specifications detailed enough for a builder to construct and a certifier to approve. Your designer coordinates with engineers and other consultants during this phase. The quality of this documentation directly affects your construction costs — learn more about why construction experience in your designer matters.

What’s produced

  • Full architectural drawing set (plans, elevations, sections, details)
  • Construction details (how materials connect, waterproofing, flashings)
  • Window and door schedule (every window and door specified by size, type, and material)
  • Finish schedule (materials and finishes for every surface)
  • Specifications (detailed description of materials, methods, and standards)
  • Site plan with setbacks, levels, and services

What consultants are engaged

Your designer typically coordinates:

  • Structural engineer (beam sizes, footing design, connections)
  • Soil/geotechnical engineer (soil testing for footing design)
  • Energy assessor (NatHERS energy rating)
  • Hydraulic engineer (stormwater design)
  • Surveyor (if a contour survey is needed)

How long it takes

Full documentation takes 3-5 weeks for a standard residential project. Complex projects may take longer. Engineering turnaround is often the bottleneck.

Stage 5: Council Approval

What happens

Your designer compiles all drawings, engineering, and reports into a documentation package and lodges it with a private certifier for Building Approval. If a Development Approval is also required, this is lodged with Gold Coast City Council. See our detailed guide to the Gold Coast council approval process.

What to expect

  • The certifier reviews the documentation (2-3 weeks)
  • They issue a Request for Information (RFI) asking for clarifications — this is normal
  • Your designer responds to the RFI and resubmits
  • The certifier issues the Building Approval with conditions
  • You’re now approved to start construction

How long it takes

Building Approval typically takes 3-6 weeks from lodgement. Development Approval adds another 6-12 weeks.

Stage 6: Builder Selection and Construction

What happens

With approved plans in hand, you can now approach builders for quotes. Your designer’s documentation quality directly affects how accurately builders can price the work.

Your designer’s role during construction

This varies by designer. Some offer:

  • Tender management (helping you compare builder quotes)
  • Builder recommendation (from their network of trusted builders)
  • Construction observation (periodic site visits to check the build matches the plans)
  • Variation review (assessing any builder-requested changes)

Others hand over the plans and their involvement ends. Clarify this upfront so you know what support you’ll have during the build.

The Typical Timeline

Stage Duration
Consultation and brief 1-2 weeks
Concept design 3-4 weeks
Design development 2-3 weeks
Construction documentation 3-5 weeks
Council approval 3-6 weeks
Total (design to approval) 12-20 weeks

The total from first meeting to approved plans is typically 3-5 months for a standard residential project. Complex projects or those requiring Development Approval take longer.

How to Get the Best Result from Your Designer

Be clear about your budget

The single most important thing you can do. A designer who knows your budget designs to it. A designer who doesn’t know your budget designs what they think looks good — and it often costs more than you can afford.

Make decisions promptly

Every week of delay in your feedback adds a week to your timeline. Designers work on multiple projects simultaneously, and delays push you back in the queue.

Trust the process

Good design takes time. The concept stage might feel slow, but getting the concept right saves enormous amounts of money and stress later. A week spent refining the concept is worth months of avoiding construction changes.

Be honest about what you don’t like

Designers would rather hear “I don’t like this” early than discover it after documentation is complete. Honest feedback is not rude — it’s essential.

Keep a single point of contact

If you’re building with a partner, agree on one person to manage communication with the designer. Conflicting feedback from two people slows the process and confuses the outcome.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much involvement will I have in the design process?

A lot — and that’s a good thing. You’ll be actively involved in reviewing concepts, making material decisions, and providing feedback at every stage. A good designer guides you through these decisions rather than making them for you.

What if I don’t like the concept design?

That’s what the concept stage is for. Your designer will revise the concept based on your feedback. Most projects go through 2-3 concept revisions before everyone is happy. If you and your designer fundamentally disagree on direction, discuss it openly — the design should reflect your vision, not theirs.

Can I make changes after plans are approved?

Yes, but changes after approval may require a new approval application and additional fees. Minor changes can sometimes be handled as site instructions during construction, but significant changes need to go back through the approval process.

Do I own the plans?

In most cases, yes. Your building designer’s plans become your property once you’ve paid for them in full. You can take them to any builder you choose. However, some designers retain copyright — check your agreement.

What should I do if there’s a problem during construction?

Contact your designer. Even if their formal involvement has ended, most designers will help resolve discrepancies between the plans and what’s being built. If the builder is doing something different from the approved plans, your designer can clarify the intent and help find a solution.

Summary

Working with a building designer is a collaborative process that typically takes 3-5 months from first meeting to approved plans. The key to a great result is choosing a designer who listens, being clear about your budget, providing timely feedback, and trusting the process.

The investment in good design pays for itself many times over through a smoother approval process, more accurate builder quotes, and fewer costly changes during construction.


At Design Science, we guide you through every stage of the design process — from initial consultation through to approved plans and builder selection. Our $280 consultation is the first step. Book now to discuss your project.

David Steadman — Licensed Builder and Building Designer

David Steadman

Licensed Builder & Building Designer

David Steadman is the founder of Design Science, a Gold Coast building design practice backed by over 30 years of hands-on construction experience. One of few Australians holding both a QBCC Builder's Licence and Building Designer licence, David brings a rare combination of design thinking and practical building knowledge to every project.

About David → Request a Consultation →