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You signed the lease.
You love the test fit.
You have a budget in mind.
Now the real work begins.
In Part 4 of this series, we dive into architectural drawings — and why this stage is where expectations, budgets, and reality often collide for dental startups.
Many doctors mistake a test fit for a finalized design. But a test fit is exactly what it sounds like: a preliminary layout to see what fits. It is not engineered, not code-reviewed in depth, and not ready for construction pricing.
In this episode, we discuss:
• Why test fits are not construction drawings
• How existing conditions (HVAC closets, panels, VAV units) change layouts
• Why moving one element can trigger a domino effect in design
• The difference between permit drawings and fully detailed construction sets
• How incomplete MEP (mechanical, electrical, plumbing) plans cause change orders
• Why cheaper architectural fees can lead to higher construction costs
We also unpack a critical misconception: comparing architects solely by design appearance or upfront fee — instead of evaluating scope, engineering inclusion, and level of detail.
If you’re early in design or comparing architectural proposals, this episode will help you avoid costly redraws, timeline delays, and change orders.
Because once drawings go from “concept” to “permit,” the real financial implications begin.
By Arminco IncYou signed the lease.
You love the test fit.
You have a budget in mind.
Now the real work begins.
In Part 4 of this series, we dive into architectural drawings — and why this stage is where expectations, budgets, and reality often collide for dental startups.
Many doctors mistake a test fit for a finalized design. But a test fit is exactly what it sounds like: a preliminary layout to see what fits. It is not engineered, not code-reviewed in depth, and not ready for construction pricing.
In this episode, we discuss:
• Why test fits are not construction drawings
• How existing conditions (HVAC closets, panels, VAV units) change layouts
• Why moving one element can trigger a domino effect in design
• The difference between permit drawings and fully detailed construction sets
• How incomplete MEP (mechanical, electrical, plumbing) plans cause change orders
• Why cheaper architectural fees can lead to higher construction costs
We also unpack a critical misconception: comparing architects solely by design appearance or upfront fee — instead of evaluating scope, engineering inclusion, and level of detail.
If you’re early in design or comparing architectural proposals, this episode will help you avoid costly redraws, timeline delays, and change orders.
Because once drawings go from “concept” to “permit,” the real financial implications begin.