Why the smartest building decisions happen before you begin
Written by
18 March 2026
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4 min read

For many homeowners, the building journey begins long before plans are drawn or materials are selected. It begins with questions. Who do you talk to first? What should you budget for? Which decisions matter most early on, and which can wait?
According to architect and Grand Designs New Zealand host Tom Webster, that early stage is also where clarity matters most.
“You sort of need a key to get into the process,” he says. “Building isn’t novel, there are millions of houses, but it is complex.”


That complexity is part of what gives Home Design Evening its value. For Webster, who will return this year as host, the event offers something increasingly rare: the chance to move from browsing and research into real conversation.
“The big thing for me is that we have this incredible amount of information on ArchiPro... everything’s there,” he says. “But then having it paired with an evening where you can meet real people, meet the consultants you’ve seen online, and actually pick up the products you’ve been looking at. That pairing is brilliant. It makes the whole thing real. It makes it tangible.”
That shift, from abstract to immediate, is where the evening begins to do its best work.
Hosted at Shed 10, the Auckland event brings architects, builders, designers and leading suppliers into one room, creating an environment where attendees can ask questions, compare perspectives and better understand how a successful project comes together. For Webster, who has now hosted several of the evenings, the strength of the format lies not just in the expertise on stage, but in the spirit of the room itself.

“The vibe is informal but sophisticated,” he says. “There’s a lovely combination of glitz and glamour, but also such a warm, enthusiastic, friendly atmosphere. You really feel included.”
It is that openness, he suggests, that helps lower the barrier for people who are still finding their feet. While many homeowners arrive with only a loose sense of what they want, hearing experienced professionals speak candidly about process, priorities and pitfalls can make the path ahead feel far more navigable.
“I think homeowners, particularly people who haven’t built or renovated before, find navigating the design team and the different stages of a project quite difficult,” Webster says. “So actually seeing that these professionals are just people, and that they’re approachable, is a really valuable revelation.”


The panel discussions, in particular, have revealed an idea that comes up again and again. That successful homes are rarely the result of one discipline working in isolation. Instead, the best outcomes come from collaboration and from assembling the right team early.
“The big thing I’ve got out of the panels is the cohesion within construction,” he says. “So often we pigeonhole people and say, this is their role, this is their role. But the feeling that comes through is that teamwork within a project is what makes a successful project.”
That message feels especially relevant at a time when many homeowners are navigating tighter budgets, more complexity and a vast amount of information online. Home Design Evening does not remove that complexity entirely, but it helps bring shape to it. It offers a place to listen, ask, learn and begin.
For Webster, that is ultimately what makes the event worth attending.
“It’s the best night out where you can learn, mix and share your dreams,” he says. “And maybe even work out how to realise them.”
Home Design Evening offers the chance to learn, ask questions and meet the people behind the process. Register here to attend ArchiPro’s Home Design Evening, presented by Altus Window Systems.
