I will be designing a small commercial interior renovation shortly but I am unlicensed.
David Cole, AIA
Jun 27, 16 11:48 pm
At my previous offices in NYC we used Melrose and Archetype, and had good experiences with each.
An expediter isn't going to plan-stamp your drawings, though. If you're working on a project in which an architectural stamp is required, you'll still need an architect's stamp.
BulgarBlogger
Jun 28, 16 1:26 am
Municipal Building Consultants and Greenlight Expediting
awaiting_deletion
Jun 28, 16 6:34 am
this is only a sign of how much work there is in NYC right now. unlicensed people looking for low grade expediters with rubber stamps on an architecture forum.
shellarchitect
Jun 29, 16 10:00 am
ill stamp drawings for any and all projects in new york, or any other state, except michigan!
MelanieGambrio
Apr 26, 18 3:16 pm
My office worked with Grand Expediters NYC. They got us all the NYC work permits we needed for our construction projects. We are renovating three townhouses. Two of which had vertical and horizontal enlargements. Several permits were needed, and they got the job done.
Can anyone recommend a good NYC expediter?
I will be designing a small commercial interior renovation shortly but I am unlicensed.
At my previous offices in NYC we used Melrose and Archetype, and had good experiences with each.
An expediter isn't going to plan-stamp your drawings, though. If you're working on a project in which an architectural stamp is required, you'll still need an architect's stamp.
Municipal Building Consultants and Greenlight Expediting
this is only a sign of how much work there is in NYC right now. unlicensed people looking for low grade expediters with rubber stamps on an architecture forum.
ill stamp drawings for any and all projects in new york, or any other state, except michigan!
My office worked with Grand Expediters NYC. They got us all the NYC work permits we needed for our construction projects. We are renovating three townhouses. Two of which had vertical and horizontal enlargements. Several permits were needed, and they got the job done.
Good luck!