How We Build

From concept to operations.

DGC executes projects through coordinated design, permitting, construction, and operational handoff. The principle is integration -- the same team holds the project together across phases.

Design coordination

Architecture, engineering, and consultant management with constructability awareness built in from schematic design.

Permitting

Jurisdiction-specific submittal strategy, comment-cycle management, and entitlement coordination through permit issuance.

GC management

Bid review, scope leveling, contract negotiation, and field oversight on the owner's side of the table.

Schedule discipline

Master schedule, critical-path management, and weekly look-ahead reviews from groundbreaking through CO.

Budget & draw control

Pay-application review, lien-waiver discipline, contingency tracking, and variance reporting to lenders and investors.

Operational handoff

Property management, leasing, and operational coordination for stabilization through hold or disposition.

Decision context

From concept to operations: what serious readers should know

This page is intended for readers evaluating how DGC Development Corp thinks before they evaluate any individual project. The operating standard is simple: identify the real constraint early, test the economics against conservative assumptions, and keep execution responsibility visible from the first conversation through delivery. That matters for landowners, capital partners, public stakeholders, consultants, and internal project teams because development risk usually compounds when assumptions are vague or ownership is unclear. DGC's process favors written scope, disciplined underwriting, milestone-based review, and direct communication around entitlement, design, construction, leasing, and market risk.

Risk first

Each discussion should identify entitlement, market, capital, construction, timing, operating, and exit assumptions before a recommendation is treated as reliable.

Clear record

Scope, responsibility, milestones, assumptions, and open diligence items should be written clearly enough for owners, partners, consultants, and lenders to review.

Next decision

The practical goal is to define the next decision gate: continue diligence, revise the plan, change the structure, or stop before avoidable risk compounds.