How to Avoid Common Mistakes in the Building Design Process

Building a home or commercial space is one of the most exciting things you can do—but it’s also where many people go wrong. You might have a vision in your head, a mood board on your wall, and a budget in place. Still, things can fall apart quickly if key details are missed early on. …

28 July, 2025
How to Avoid Common Mistakes in the Building Design Process

Building a home or commercial space is one of the most exciting things you can do—but it’s also where many people go wrong. You might have a vision in your head, a mood board on your wall, and a budget in place. Still, things can fall apart quickly if key details are missed early on.

At ES Design, we’ve worked with clients across  NSW who often come to us after they’ve already hit a snag. The truth? Most issues aren’t big disasters. They’re small, avoidable mistakes that snowball over time.

Here’s how you can avoid the most common building design mistakes—and what you should do instead to make your build smoother, smarter, and stress-free.

1. Skipping a Site Analysis

It’s easy to fall in love with a block of land and jump straight to floor plans. But every site has rules, limits, and quirks.

Is it sloped? Prone to flooding? Affected by bushfire regulations? Do setback rules limit what you can do? Overlooking this step is one of the biggest building design mistakes we see.

Tip: Always start with a detailed site analysis before doing anything else. Our town planners work hand in hand with our professional building designers, who will assess solar access, orientation, zoning, and existing infrastructure to set you up for success.

2. Not Understanding CDC vs DA

Many people assume council approval is always required. But in NSW, some builds qualify for fast-tracked approval via a Complying Development Certificate (CDC). Others require a full Development Application (DA). While some builds fall under exempt development and don’t require formal approval.

Confusing the two can delay your project or waste money on plans that won’t get approved.

Tip: Speak to one of our qualified planners who understand the planning controls. They’ll guide you on which approval pathway applies to your project and help guide the building design within those rules.

3.Poor Communication Between Client and Designer

Design is collaborative. If you’re unclear or vague about your goals, you’re more likely to be unhappy with the results. And that leads to revision after revision, which adds both time and cost.

Tip: Be honest. Share your lifestyle habits. Show photos of what you love. Mention what you dislike. It’s your space, after all. Great building designers will listen, ask questions, and translate those details into a design that works.

For examples of thoughtful collaboration, browse our completed projects.

4.Ignoring Passive Design Principles

Buildings shouldn’t fight the environment—they should work with it. Passive design means designing for sun, shade, breeze, and climate. It’s not new, but it’s often skipped in favour of bigger windows or flashy inclusions.

Tip: Let the sun in during winter, and block it in summer. Place windows to catch breezes. You’ll reduce your reliance on air-con and heating—and create a home that just feels better.

5.Overcomplicating the Floor Plan

There’s a big difference between a spacious layout and a confusing one. Too many rooms, odd angles, or oversized spaces can waste energy and money, and make your building harder to furnish and live in.

Tip: Keep it simple. Ask yourself, “Will I actually use this room?” Flow matters. Storage matters. Circulation matters. Your building and design team should help you trim the fat without cutting comfort.

6. Forgetting About the Future

You may be building for today, but life changes. Your family might grow. You might work from home. Or you might age in place.

Tip: Plan with flexibility. Include multi-use spaces. Design with minimal internal steps. Leave space for future additions. Smart designs adapt over time.

7. Choosing Looks Over Practicality

A statement staircase or glass façade might look stunning, but how easy is it to clean? How energy efficient is it? What’s the maintenance cost?

Tip: Prioritise functionality. A good building and design plan will find the balance between form and function, ensuring your space is beautiful and liveable.

8. Ignoring Legal and Compliance Requirements

From BASIX certificates to the National Construction Code (NCC), there are mandatory standards for new homes and commercial properties. They cover energy use, water, ventilation, and more.

Designs that ignore these rules often require expensive reworks later.

Tip: Make sure your design team incorporates all regulatory requirements from the start.  

9. Engaging the RIGHT People Too Late

It’s not uncommon for people to buy land, lock in a builder, and then realise the design doesn’t fit the block—or meet regulations.

Or worse, they spend weeks sketching their own ideas, only to learn they’ve missed key building rules.

Tip: Talk to professionals early. An experienced building designer can help you avoid costly missteps and guide your project from concept to approval.

And if you’re unsure how to get started, you can always contact ES Design for honest, early advice.

Bonus: Don’t Skip the Small Stuff

Some of the most frustrating errors are small things: not enough power points, windows that open the wrong way, or awkward kitchen layouts.

These aren’t big enough to stop a build, but they’ll annoy you every day.

Tip: Walk through your plans like you live there. Think about where the light switches go, where you’ll drop your keys. Where the kids will throw their backpacks, a little practical thinking goes a long way.

Final Thoughts

The biggest building design mistakes aren’t the ones made on site. They’re the ones made before the shovel even hits the ground.

Most of them come down to a lack of research, poor planning, or going it alone. But that’s the good news too—because they’re preventable.

With the right support, you can avoid costly headaches and build something you’ll love living or working in every single day.

If you’re ready to get your project off the ground, browse through our past projects or contact us today to talk through your vision. No pressure. Just expert advice from the people who live and breathe design—so you don’t have to worry about what you’ve missed.

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