There's a question we get asked more than almost any other: do I really need a chartered architect, or can I just use a designer or a builder who does drawings?
It's a fair question. So here's an honest answer.
In the UK, "architect" is a protected title. You cannot legally call yourself one unless you are registered with the Architects Registration Board (ARB). That registration requires seven years of education and practice, followed by a professional examination. It isn't a course you complete over a weekend.
Beyond ARB registration, RIBA Chartered status represents an additional layer of commitment. RIBA, founded in 1834, sets the professional standards that chartered architects work to. A RIBA Chartered Practice, which RISE Design Studio is, operates under a code of conduct that covers everything from how we handle client money to how we manage professional development within the team.
None of that is box-ticking. It's the framework that makes professional accountability possible.
Chartered architects are required to hold professional indemnity insurance. This matters enormously on a live project. If advice turns out to be wrong, if a drawing contains an error, if something is missed, there is a formal and insured mechanism for putting it right.
Without that, clients are largely on their own. Contracts with unregulated designers can be hard to enforce, and the professional recourse simply doesn't exist in the same way. For a project involving significant personal investment, that's a real risk.
This is where a lot of projects get into difficulty without proper professional input. Planning policy is local, nuanced, and changes regularly. Building regulations are detailed, technical, and non-negotiable. Navigating both simultaneously, while also trying to run a project, is genuinely complex.
A chartered architect handles that navigation as a matter of course. At RISE we've built much of our reputation on planning applications for sites and projects where others had already tried and failed, not by cutting corners, but by understanding the policy landscape thoroughly enough to make a compelling, well-evidenced case.
There's sometimes a temptation to treat design as the decorative layer that gets added once the practical decisions have already been made. That's the wrong way around.
Good architecture starts with design thinking: how should these spaces relate to each other, how does light enter the building, how does the structure perform thermally, how will the building age? Those questions, answered well at the outset, shape everything that follows. They affect how the building feels to be in, how much it costs to run, and what it's worth over time.
At RISE, our focus on low-energy and low-embodied-carbon design isn't a marketing position. It's how we approach the work. Sustainability is most effective when it's integrated from the first sketch, not retrofitted at the end.
A good architect doesn't disappear after planning permission is granted. RIBA Stages 4 to 6, covering technical design, construction documentation, and contract administration, are where a significant amount of value is either created or lost.
Managing contractors, reviewing programmes, assessing valuations, certifying payments, and keeping the project aligned with the design intent all require sustained professional involvement. We do a large proportion of our most important work during construction, not before it.
Chartered status is the baseline. Beyond that, look at the work. Does the design sensibility align with what you're trying to achieve? Does the practice have relevant experience, whether that's residential extensions, new builds, planning on difficult sites, or something more specialist? And critically: do you feel like they're genuinely listening to you, or just presenting solutions they've already decided on?
The architect-client relationship works best when it's a genuine collaboration. You bring the aspirations and the knowledge of how you want to live or work. We bring the design thinking, the technical knowledge, and the professional framework to make it happen.
Most building projects are significant undertakings. Financially, logistically, and personally. The difference between a project that just gets built and one that genuinely exceeds expectations almost always comes down to the quality of professional input at the start.
That's what a chartered architect provides. Not just drawings, but the thinking, the accountability, and the sustained involvement that turn a good brief into an exceptional building.
At RISE, we work on projects because we want to work on them. Let's find out what yours could become.
→ Email us at architects@risedesignstudio.co.uk
→ Or call the studio on 020 3947 5886
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