Home Design & Drafting in the Twin Cities Metro

Residential Design and Plan Sets for the Home You Have in Mind

Designing a home in the Twin Cities Metro, whether you’re starting from a blank lot or reworking the one you live in, comes with a lot of unknowns.

My job is to take that pressure off your shoulders. 

Using my assessments of the site or the existing structure, we’ll sit down to talk through what matters most to you and work through the design in a way that shows how everything fits together. These drawings become a shared reference point for everyone involved to prevent the kind of misunderstandings that can add cost or create frustration later.

How Your Vision Becomes a Plan

  • We talk through your ideas and priorities so the design starts with what you actually want.

  • I measure the site or existing structure and record the details the plan needs.

  • As I work in the industry-standard software Revit, you’ll see the actual layout take shape in a 3D model, including where rooms go, how they connect, how the roof meets the walls, how stairs fit, and how the structure supports everything.

  • We adjust room sizes, circulation, window placement, exterior shape, and overall layout until the design matches the way you want to use the home day-to-day.

  • I prepare a full plan set with floor plans, elevations, roof information, sections, and notes your builder and city need to move the project forward.

  • I prepare a final plan set that keeps you, your builder, and your city on the same page.

A well-coordinated plan set helps Twin Cities reviewers and builders move the project forward without confusion or delays.
Good Plans Today Save You Stress Tomorrow

Professionally-prepared residential design plans keep the entire project headed in the same direction.

By working with Link Built, you can be confident that your builder knows exactly what you expect, and your city reviewer can see how the design fits local requirements. You’ll start with a plan that already answers the questions your builder and city are going to ask.

That means fewer surprises, fewer change orders, and far less backtracking once the work begins. 

Starting a Home Project in the Twin Cities?

I’m here to help you sort out what’s possible and what the plan needs to show before you involve a builder or your city.