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------------------------------------------- Allen Neyman AIA Allen E Neyman Associates Concept Architecture LLC Rockville MD ------------------------------------------- Not sure that AIA can help. The status of insurance coverage for everyone is up in political air. Even the results of the coming elections will bring into focus only how many paths there are to take in the meantime for the forseeable future stay well and keep a healthy attitude and reserve some cash, if you any, to pay the way. The situation is critical for all others.
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------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 10-19-2012 08:16 From: Rand Soellner Subject: Building a House? Call a Realtor First! Hi John, I agree completely. I'll be on specs all day on a project, but should be available from 9AM-9PM. 828-269-9046. Constructive thoughts and planning are an architect's forte and that's we all of us on the CRAN forum should do: DO something about what antagonizes us. Not just gripe. WE are the AIA. Let's band together in focus groups about what we are passionate about and bring about change. ------------------------------------------- Rand Soellner AIA Architect/Owner/Principal Home Architects Cashiers NC ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 10-18-2012 14:00 From: John Hrivnak Subject: Building a House? Call a Realtor First! Rand, AARGH!!! Our marketing needs not only to counter "call the builder", we need to counter "call the realtor", both of which are out of sequence and are abundant with potential wallet pain for clients. Worst case is when client calls realtor first and leads them to buy a builder-owned lot. The builder now has them by the short hairs and they get to pay more than retail, don't get input on negotiating the site from an architect (which can save more than the total fee), don't get a custom design (or engineering, or "green" or an opportunity for the home to adapt to them rather than the other way around). A.B.C. Architect Before Contractor The other thing I've written on repeatedly is "if it needs a permit, it needs a stamp"! We accomplish the latter (which aligns HSW for both, only logical) and we improve the built environment and our profession. Lets discuss strategies. Our clients deserve better advise than call the realtor or the builder first. You're right, AIA has flunked the course and seems to serve only the 5% of firms that are large. They can't do the math, either. 95% of architects are in firms of 5 or less... and we have little voice through the AIA. Welcome you to contact me that we might help one another accomplish something here. ------------------------------------------- John Hrivnak AIA Principal Hrivnak Associates, Ltd. Saint Charles IL ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 10-16-2012 08:12 From: Rand Soellner Subject: Building a House? Call a Realtor First! Hello Edward, Okay: there you have it: the power of having your professional organization use public awareness programs and commercials and ads to enlighten and inform the public that what your organization's members do is good and you should contact them to engage their services. Yes sir. And that is Exactly what the CRAN-AIA is headed toward: creating methods of funding so that we can also have public awareness programs to enlighten the public so that they might really want to first contact an ARCHITECT. There you go; now that's what I'm talking about! Yes, the NAR does a much better job of promoting its membership's services than the AIA presently does, in particular, for us residential architects. That is why the CRAN is developing ideas and systems to generate good and useful things to help its membership and the home-owning public to create cashflow to help us fund public awareness programs. It will take some time. And the AIA has already had 157 years to do this and has not. Shame on them. Okay, now let's do something about it and kick'em in the rear and fix this. David Andreozzi has developed CRAN symposium events to generate revenue for this effort. I, along with others (David & Debra), am developing the CRAN Plaque Database System to help the public, architects and CRAN to have a good and useful new beneficial product out there that will also create an income stream for CRAN, to help us fund public awareness programs. It will be a long haul, but please help us think of some more good and useful inventions so that we can get there faster! All my best, ------------------------------------------- Rand Soellner AIA Architect/Owner/Principal Home Architects Cashiers NC ------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 10-15-2012 10:31 From: Edward Shannon Subject: Building a House? Call a Realtor First! This message has been cross posted to the following Discussion Forums: Housing Knowledge Community and Custom Residential Architects Network . ------------------------------------------- Sunday Morning I saw a commercial from the National Association of Realtors. It acknowledged the costly investment of building a new home, and urged that paople call a realtor first. How does AIA/CRAN feel about this? I have dealt with realors before. Their main motive is to "get the sale". I have upset a few of them when touring older properties and telling their prospective buyer the truth about what it will cost to renovate - or in one case the realtor had no idea that a property was non-conforming and the buyer wanted to do a second floor addition. My due dilligence killed the sale, and upset the realtor! Do we really think it is the public's best interest to call a sale's person? Will AIA/CRAN ever be able to compete with this? I other news, there are some folks at NAHB looking at establishing a Residential Designer certification for their associaition. If they do - and it isn't too hard to obtain, there will be a whole new class of "qualified" residential designers competing with architects! Is the AIA aware of our competitors? Is the AIA doing anything to work with these bodies? Is the AIA going to continue to portray the architect as the designer who will design an avant-garde Euro-box and let those who have mainstream tastes continue to seek a builder or realtor first? In the past twenty years, home design has become far more complex (i.e. more stingent codes, longer spans, complex moisture issues) yet Residential design is still not regulated. Will AIA acknowledge the need for residetial design to be regulated, or will residential design be a gray area - something that anyone can do - relegating residential architects to the socially elite? ------------------------------------------- Edward Shannon Waterloo IA -------------------------------------------
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