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ARCHITECTS’ DUTIES

TRUSTEES FOR THE PUBLIC Insistence on high-principled, efficient service to the public is emphatically expressed in the code of professional practice of the Royal Institute of British Architects, whose example is followed by the New Zealand Institute. "An architect is artist, scientist, and business man,” states Mr Geoffrey Wilson, honorary secretary of the R.1.8.A., “ but from the point of view of the Code of Professional Practice, he is first and last a trustee for the proper expenditure of the building owners’ money, though never actually handling it, and it is of primary importance that he should be able to give impartial and completely disinterested advice to his client. When, therefore, payments become due to the contractor under the terms of the contract, the architect issues his certificates stating the amount due and to be paid direct by his client to the contractor. He must be remunerated solely by his professional fees and is rightly debarred from any other source of remuneration in connection with the works and duties entrusted to him. This may seem so obvious that any comment is superfluous, but cases have arisen where an architect has accepted wbrk involving the giving and receiving of discounts or commissions from contractors or tradesmen. That some blame attaches in this respect to his client as well as himself is obvious from the hypothetical case of Mr X., who being the type of man who wishes to get something for nothing, decides to drive a hard bargain with an architect, hoping that he will not uphold the R.1.8.A. Scale of Professional Charges, but forgetting that such an . architect may be equally disloyal to the code.. The architect finally agrees with his client to accept a ridiculously low fee, with the mental reservation that he will ‘ pick up on the swings ’ of discount, gifts, and commissions what he has lost on the roundabouts of fair and proper dealing. That there can be no possible excuse for such conduct is agreed, but Mr X. cannot be held blameless or be given any sympathy if he is unable to appreciate that the maintenance of a strict professional code is as much in his interest as that of the architect. “ It will, however, be noticed that architects are sometimes employed by commercial firms, which may at first sight appear an illogicality. There is, however, no objection to this, always provided that the architect so employed is remunerated solely by means of a salary, and that such remuneration must not in any way depend on commissions based on the profits of the firm who employ him. The R.1.8.A. notes this growing custom of the employment, of architects in this capacity, and is glad to see that commercial firms appreciate the necessity for employing the properly-trained and qualified man in their own interests and those of the public, especially under the conditions which have often prevailed when many young qualified men have found it difficult, if not impossible, to obtain regular employment in any other way.”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19361121.2.63

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 23044, 21 November 1936, Page 11

Word Count
501

ARCHITECTS’ DUTIES Otago Daily Times, Issue 23044, 21 November 1936, Page 11

ARCHITECTS’ DUTIES Otago Daily Times, Issue 23044, 21 November 1936, Page 11