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LLC and Corp Legal???

CLOCLO

I worked at "architecture firms" that were LLC and Corp. Are these considered legal firms in terms of completing IDP/AXP hours? Specifically in the state of Florida?

 
Jul 11, 16 9:09 am
Non Sequitur

Ask Rick Balkins. He's the resident Florida legal expert here.

Jul 11, 16 9:11 am  · 
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NON!!! STOP IT!!! You're summoning the STUXnet (to borrow a joke from a dear friend).

CLOCLO, I think the question is getting a registered architect to sign off on your work, not the firm corporate structure. Architecture firms take all kinds of forms including sole proprietor, LLC, PC, etc.

Jul 11, 16 9:21 am  · 
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CLOCLO

Thank you Donna. The thing I'm worried about is the company is not owned by a licensed architect but rather they have one on staff who I work under. As long as he is the one signing my hours there shouldn't be an issue?

Jul 11, 16 9:28 am  · 
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BulgarBlogger

Check the board's licensing requirements. In NY, an LLC and a Corp are not allowed to legally offer architectural services, precisely because only licensed professionals are allowed to own the majority of shares in a company. That's why NY invented a new type of entity, a DPC (Design Professional Corporation) where up to 25% of the company is allowed to be owned by a non-licensed professional. I had to submit extra IDP hours precisely because I worked at an LLC, even though the person signing off on my hours was one of the owners and a registered architect. 

Jul 11, 16 9:36 am  · 
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Non Sequitur

Ah, Donna...

Jul 11, 16 9:46 am  · 
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Thank you Donna.

Jul 11, 16 4:20 pm  · 
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