Scope of Work

Project involvement is typically structured across the following phases. Not all phases are required for every project.

Budget & Design Framework

Establishing financial and design parameters before selection begins.

  • FF&E budget development and alignment

  • Cost benchmarks and target ranges

  • Scope definition by space and use

  • Early coordination with project teams to align expectations

Design

The conceptual and spatial foundation of the FF&E package.

  • FF&E concept and design intent

  • Furniture, lighting, and object selection

  • Spatial layouts and furniture plans

  • Object placement and circulation testing

  • Material and finish direction

  • Tagging and coordination with design drawings

Specifications & Documentation

Translation of design intent into procurement-ready information.

  • Detailed FF&E schedules

  • Product specifications and cut sheets

  • Finish schedules and material coordination

  • Compliance with project standards and budgets

  • Documentation suitable for pricing and tender

Procurement Support

Design oversight during purchasing and value alignment.

  • Review of pricing and substitutions

  • Value engineering and alternates

  • Coordination with procurement teams and vendors

  • Clarification of design intent during ordering

Project Management

FF&E-focused coordination through execution.

  • Liaison with vendors, warehouses, and installers

  • Site coordination related to FF&E scope

  • Installation review and deficiency documentation and project close out

Project Context

This work is most effective in projects where FF&E carries spatial identity rather than surface styling:

  • Design-led commercial and hospitality projects

  • Amenity, lobby, workplace, and public-facing interiors

  • Projects requiring FF&E leadership without expanding interior design scope

Approach

FF&E is treated as interior architecture — not decoration and not product sourcing.

Decisions are grounded in scale, circulation, durability, and context. The intent is to produce interiors that feel resolved and intentional, where objects contribute structure rather than noise.

Engagement Model

Projects are undertaken as discrete, per-project engagements aligned with scope and complexity. Work integrates into existing consultant teams, providing clear design direction that can be carried through documentation, pricing, and execution.