For architects & interior architects

Every project sounds exciting in a contact form.

An intake agent scopes each inquiry the way you would in a first meeting — programme, surface, budget envelope, timeline, planning constraints — so the meetings you take are with projects that can actually happen.

Start free — while in beta

Set up with you — on your practice, your fee logic, your standards.

The problem, in this lens

Ninety minutes of coffee and sketch talk. Then the budget conversation.

The first meeting is long, free, and generous — on site or at the office, walking the rooms, talking references. And then comes the number, and a third of projects die right there: the envelope was never going to survive contact with reality, and neither was the timeline.

The form knew none of this. It told you "renovation, house, as soon as possible." It never asked what the visitor would actually pay to know: whether their envelope matches their ambitions, whether their timeline survives permits, whether you're the right kind of practice for the job.

01

Every inquiry arrives scoped.

Programme, surface, existing condition, budget envelope, timeline, decision stage — a brief you read in one minute instead of discovering in ninety.

02

Visitors get honest answers early.

How your fees work, what a realistic envelope looks like for their type of project, what a permit timeline does to their move-in date — from your configured services and knowledge, before anyone books a meeting.

03

Wrong-fit projects hear it gracefully.

Budget below your floor, scope outside your practice, a timeline physics won't allow — they leave with a useful answer instead of a wasted meeting on both calendars.

The artifact

The brief is the product.

Chatbots route. Forms collect. Pepline writes. Every completed conversation compiles into a scoped brief: programme, budget envelope, timeline against permits, decision stage, open questions, and an honest fit note. You read it in a minute — and the first meeting starts on the project, not on the interrogation.

Envelopes stay in ranges you define — the way a careful practice talks money in a first meeting, never pretending to be an estimate.

Generate one about your own project
Brief — project inquiry
Townhouse reunification & full renovation
Prepared by pepline
for you
ref. AR-0217
Project

Full renovation of a 1930s townhouse, ~140 m², currently divided into two units to be reunified. Structural wall likely affected.

Programme

Family of four; open kitchen and living, three bedrooms, home office, garden connection. Wants "warm minimal" — referenced two projects from your portfolio by name.

Budget envelope
€280,000 – €340,000
Works including fees — aware it may move once structural scope is known. Financing approved.
Timeline

Hoped to start works in spring; the agent explained the permit and design-phase timeline, and the visitor adjusted expectations to autumn without friction.

Decision stage

Owns the property, spoke with one other practice, decision within a month.

Open questions

Party-wall agreement status unknown; asbestos survey not yet done.

Fit note
Good fit

Budget and programme within practice range; strong portfolio match — flagged for a first meeting.

This is the shape of the brief the agent produces.

How it goes live

We set it up with you.

No template picker, no 40-node flowchart. Your agent starts as a working session with us, on your practice — then the flow, the criteria, and the voice stay yours to edit from the dashboard.

Step 01

We read your portfolio and fee logic with you.

Your project types, your services, how your fees work and why — most of what the agent needs is in your portfolio and in how you already explain the practice.

Step 02

We configure the scoping flow and fit criteria.

Your budget floor, your project types, your radius, the questions a first meeting always asks — and how it sounds. Yours, not a bot’s.

Step 03

The widget replaces the project-inquiry form.

One snippet where “tell us about your project” used to sit. Scoped briefs arrive by email and in your dashboard, full conversation attached.

Everything this agent runs on — the flow, the criteria, the services, the knowledge, the voice — is yours to reshape from the dashboard. None of it is code.

See the platform
One last thing

You already do this interview.

In every first meeting, on every site visit. The agent just does it before the meeting exists — so the ninety minutes you give a project go to one that can happen.