Design Intent Administration
DIA is a managed service that operates efficiently as the system of record for design intent – on behalf of the general
contractor. It exists to remove ambiguity, reduce risk, and ensure projects are built from clear, current, and approved intent.
Why Design Intent Administration Exists
Design Intent fails without ownership.
On complex residential projects, Design Intent breaks down because:
- Decisions arrive fragmented and late
- Designers work in parallel, outside GC control
- PMs don’t have time to govern intent
- Side conversations bypass structure
- No one owns “what’s current”
Software alone does not solve this. Design Intent Administration
exists because someone has to run the process.
What DIA Is
A governed system of record – operated for you. With DIA, efficiently actively operates the Design‑Intent
Process using our System of Record.
DIA ensures that:
- Design decisions are captured as structured data
- Every decision is tied to a real location
- WHAT is explicit
- The current state of intent is always clear
- WHERE is explicit
- Status is visible and trustworthy
Your team build from intentthey can rely on.
What the DIA Team Does

Structures incoming design intent

Enforces the design‑intent process

Reviews locations for clarity and completeness

Identifies gaps before construction

Drives RFIs based on real missing information

Maintains the current, approved state of intent
PMs are not asked to manage design intent. We do.
How Designers Participate
- Work directly with clients
- Present design options
- Confirm client design approval
- Define placement and detail
- Captures that intent
- Structures it consistently
- Governs it once the GC is accountable
Desginers keep flexibility: GCs keep control.
Approvals and Responsibility
Approvals are explicit and role‑based.
DIA distinguishes clearly between:

Design Approval
What the client wants Managed by the designer

Buildability Review(Spec Complete)
What the GC is comfortable building Managed by the GC / DIA
The seperation prevents confusion, protects the GCs, and creates a defensible record
When DIA Applies
- Design Intent may exist
- But it is not governed
- efficiently becomes the System of Record
- Location‑level approvals apply
- Design Intent is actively governed
DIA does not:
- Make design decisions
- Replace architects or designers
- Replace construction management systems
- Assume design or engineering liability
- Control means and methods
DIA governs design intent only – upstream of execution.
The Outcome
- PMs stop chasing answers
- RFIs drop
- Errors reduce
- Clients see professionalism and control
- Projects move forward with confidence.