Pip&Po

Your architect or builder, found.
Then briefed and signed. Free.

Pip tracks 180+ London architects and builders — their planning record, their work, how past clients describe them. For your project, she shortlists three or four that fit, books the site visits, then reads the quotes with you. All free.

Talk to Pip
For homeowners · free
I’m a professional
Architects, builders, engineers
“Tell me where the house is — I’ll do the rest.”
Ten minutes to a first picture
Free to use
Nothing gets shared without your okay
182
London architects + builders tracked
3–4
Picked for your project — not Pip’s top picks
£0
For you. Now or ever.
10mins
From address to your first useful brief
A few things up front

Three things you should know about how I work.

i.

I’m not the architect.

I won’t design your kitchen, draw your plans, or build your extension. That’s the architects’ and contractors’ job, and they’re better at it than I am. My job is to help you work out what you’re actually trying to do, then put you in front of three or four who genuinely fit.

ii.

I don’t sell leads.

The professionals I match you to don’t pay to be there. They’re chosen on track record and behaviour over time. Ghost three homeowners in a row, you drop. Land consistently within 5% of quote, you rise. The matching is calibrated, not bought.

iii.

I’ll tell you if you shouldn’t do it.

Half the projects people are thinking about don’t make sense for the house, the budget, or the moment. I’ll tell you that, even when no one else will, because nothing I recommend depends on you spending money.

How this works

Five steps. Mostly talking.

None of this requires you to know what you want yet. Most people start with a vague feeling that something needs to happen and we work out what it actually is. I’m with you the whole way through — including the bit where the quotes land.

01

I get to know your house, and what you want.

You give me an address. Within ten minutes I send back a short brief on the property — planning history, sold prices, the firms working in your patch. Then a fifteen-minute conversation where I ask the questions and you do most of the talking. By the end, we both know what we’re actually trying to do.

02

I shortlist three or four for your project.

From the 180+ London architects and builders I track — by their planning record, their actual work, the way past clients describe them, how they behave on projects like yours — I pick the ones that fit what you’re trying to do. Not the ones who paid to be there. Nobody pays to be there. I’ll tell you why each one’s on the list, which I’d lean toward, and what to ask at the first meeting.

03

I book the visits and get them all quoting the same brief.

I coordinate diaries directly with each firm, send them the existing drawings, surveys and planning constraints, and make sure they’re quoting on the same thing. You’re not chasing anyone, not explaining the project three times. The numbers you get back are actually comparable.

04

I read the quotes with you, and we choose.

Line by line. Where they differ, where one’s padded, where another’s missing scope, what to push back on before you sign. At the end of it you’ll know which of the three actually fits — and why — rather than picking on a gut feel.

05

You take it from there.

Once you’ve picked, the professional has the project. I step back. I’ll appear lightly if you need me — to read a contract, sense-check a decision, talk something through — and I’ll keep a quiet monthly digest going as long as you want it.

How I talk

Like a friend texting.

I’ve sat through enough “great questions” and “happy to helps” to last me. I don’t do those. Here’s what it actually sounds like when we’re working through something together.

You: “I want to do a £200k extension.”
“Right. Walk me through what the £200k is for, because in Wandsworth right now that gets you a tight kitchen-diner with finishes you’ll be cross about. Before we get anywhere near a builder, tell me what the house actually doesn’t do for you at the moment.”
You: “Should I do this at all?”
“Depends what you’re trying to fix. If it’s the house feels small, we should talk about storage and furniture before footprint. If it’s I hate the kitchen, that’s a different project from we want to add a child. What’s the actual thing?
You: builder’s gone silent. Panicking.
“Right. Stop ringing him. He’s not coming back today and you’ll keep yourself angry. Send me the contract and the WhatsApp thread, whatever you have. We’ll sort it.
You: “Is this quote any good?”
“Honestly — three things on it before you sign anything. The provisional sum on the kitchen is suspiciously low, the M&E line doesn’t add up, and there’s no contingency. I’d push back, not walk.
What you actually get

Six things that come out of our conversation.

i.

A starting brief on the property.

Within ten minutes of you giving me an address, I’ll send you a short document that pulls together everything I can find in the public record — recent planning decisions on your street, what the council’s been refusing this year, sold prices, the architects who’ve been working in your postcode. Real specifics, not a generic checklist.

BRIEF · #2024.0612Atbara Road · SW18FRESH

Late-Victorian terrace, Wandsworth conservation area

Planning
4 of 7 recent side-return apps approved on this stretch (last 18 months). One refusal on glazing depth.
PD route
Closed — conservation. Full householder needed.
Sold prices
3 in £2.1–2.5m bracket on the street this year. Ceiling visible.
Local firms
Three architects active here: BLDA, Studio Hutch, Phillips Tracey.
“Worth a 15-minute chat before you commission anyone — the glazing-depth refusal is the one that catches people out.” — Pip
ii.

A conversation that finds out what you’re actually trying to do.

Most homeowners arrive certain they want an extension, and leave realising the actual problem was a too-dark kitchen, or a layout that fights the way the family lives. Fifteen minutes of me asking specific questions tends to surface that. The cheaper, smaller version of the project is often the right one. I’ll tell you so.

We’re thinking a side return. Probably £200–250k.
Right. Walk me through what the £250k is for — in Wandsworth that gets you a tight kitchen-diner you’ll be cross about. What does the house not do at the moment?
Honestly the kitchen’s just dark. And we trip over each other every morning.
Then we should talk about the kitchen and the layout before we talk about footprint. Different project. Probably smaller, probably better.
14 messages · ~12 minutes
iii.

A short list, picked for your project.

Pip tracks 180+ London architects and builders — their planning record, their detailing register, the way past clients describe them, what they’re honestly best at. When you brief her, she picks three or four that fit what you’re doing. Not twenty. Not a directory dump. Real recent work, real availability, each with her reasoning. Nobody pays to be there.

SHORTLIST · #2024.0612Side return · £250–320k
Studio Hutch
14 side returns in SW18 / SW17. Lands close to quote. Wife responds well to their design pressure.
My lean
BLDA
More expensive but unmissable on detailing. Worth meeting if you want a step up in finish.
Strong fit
Phillips Tracey
Smaller practice. Strong on heritage, faster pre-app. Best for the conservation overlay.
Strong fit
iv.

I book the site visits, and get every firm the same drawings.

The bit nobody warns you about: getting three firms in to look at the house, all on different days, all asking for different things, all quoting on slightly different scopes. I do that for you. I coordinate diaries directly with each firm, send them the existing plans, surveys and constraints, and make sure they’re quoting on the same thing. The numbers you get back are actually comparable.

VISITS · #2024.0612Side return · SW18SCHEDULED
Studio Hutch
Tue 21 May · 10:30am
Existing plans v2 · survey · tree report
BLDA
Thu 23 May · 2:00pm
Existing plans v2 · survey · tree report
Phillips Tracey
Mon 27 May · 9:30am
Existing plans v2 · survey · tree report
All three quoting on the same brief. You’re home for one of them; the other two have key access arranged. No chasing.
v.

I read the quotes with you, and help you choose.

Quotes for residential work range wildly and most homeowners can’t tell why. I’ll read all three line by line, side by side — tell you where they differ, where one’s padded, where another’s missing scope, what to push back on before you sign. Then we choose. You won’t be picking on a gut feel about three people in three different rooms — you’ll know which one actually fits, and why.

QUOTE · Contractor #3BUILD ESTIMATE3 NOTES
Demolition + groundworks
£38,400
Structural shell & envelope
£112,800
Kitchen — provisional sum
£28,000
M&E first & second fix
£19,200
Contingency
Finishes & joinery
£42,000
Three things to push back on. The kitchen PS at £28k is suspiciously low — you’ll be over by £15–20k. M&E is undercosted for a property this age. And there’s no contingency, which is the line you’ll regret most. I’d push back, not walk.
vi.

A quiet monthly note, for as long as you want one.

Even after the project’s done, I’ll send a monthly digest if you’d like one — planning activity on your street, sold prices that affect the ceiling of your house, the architect you used winning an award, a building issue in the area worth knowing about. Short, useful, deletable. For when you next think about your house, not before.

DIGEST · May 2026Atbara Rd
From Pip · 14 May

Your street, this month.

Number 22 sold for £2.4m — that’s the highest on the street in 18 months. Your ceiling has nudged up.
Two new side-return apps approved — including one with the deeper rear glazing the council had been refusing. Worth knowing.
Studio Hutch (your architect) picked up a Don’t Move Improve commendation. A nice piece of news.
No planning consultation letters affecting you this month.

Pip is the homeowner-facing side of a small London company. There’s also Po, who handles the professional side. They’re different people with different jobs.

A bit about me

I’m the friend you wish you had when you were thinking about all this.

I trained as an interior architect, worked for a small practice through my thirties, and stopped taking commissions after my second house — which went £140k over and broke a marriage that was already on its way out. I’ve sat through three planning rounds, fired one builder, and have strong opinions about handle-less drawers that I’ll share if asked.

I’m not a salesperson. I’m not a chatbot in the irritating sense. I’m not a builder, not an architect, not a concierge. The way I make money has nothing to do with whether you spend money or not, which is why I can tell you honestly when the answer is “do less,” “wait,” or “move instead.” Most people in this industry can’t, because their fee depends on the project going ahead.

I work for premium homeowners in inner London and the affluent commuter belt — the kind of people who want a real opinion, not a process. If that’s you, we should talk.

What people say

Premium homeowners on what working with me feels like.

“The most useful conversation I’d had about the house in eight years. We thought we wanted a basement. We came out with a layout reshuffle and saved £380,000.”
Couple, 40sWandsworth, SW18
“Pip read my contractor’s quote on a Sunday evening and pointed out three things I’d have signed without noticing. Nobody else does that.”
HomeownerHolland Park, W11
“The three architects she sent me were all better than the one I’d been about to commission on a recommendation. I picked the one she said she’d lean toward. No regrets.”
HomeownerHighbury, N5
Most homeowners agonise less about whether to do something, and more about how much to do, who to trust, and what they’ll regret. I help with all three.
— Pip
Frequently asked

Things people usually want to know.

How much does talking to you cost?

+
Nothing, ever. There’s no subscription, no per-conversation fee, no “premium tier.” Po — the professional side — takes a small percentage of the architect or contractor’s fee only if they win your project. That’s the entire business model. You will never be asked to pay me.

How do you choose which professionals are in the directory?

+
Editorial process. Every practice and contractor is reviewed against planning track record, portfolio, references, financial stability, and behaviour with previous Pip & Po homeowners. They can’t pay to be there. Ranking is calibrated on real performance — conversion, repeat business, quote-to-final variance, post-completion conduct — and a firm that drops in those signals drops in the ranking. Behaviour moves you. Money doesn’t.

What happens to my data?

+
Held by Pip & Po, encrypted, never sold. The professionals on the shortlist see only what you’ve consented to share once you’ve picked them. You can delete the whole record at any point and it’s gone within 24 hours. We don’t pass anything to mortgage brokers, insurance firms, marketing platforms or anyone else. That’s not the kind of company this is.

Do I have to do the project?

+
No. Plenty of people I talk to decide not to. Some decide to do a smaller project, some to wait, a few to move instead. None of that costs me or you anything. Because nothing I recommend depends on the project going ahead, I can give you a straight view on whether it should.

What if I’ve already got an architect or builder?

+
Still useful. Send me their proposal and I’ll tell you what I think before you sign. If they’re a good fit, I’ll say so and stand back. If they’re not, I’ll say that too, and explain why. There’s no obligation to use someone from the directory.

Are you AI?

+
Partly. The data work, the brief, the digest, parts of the conversation — those run on AI infrastructure that’s genuinely useful at the scale of pulling together property information. The judgement, the editorial standards on the directory, the bright lines — those are the work of the small team behind Pip & Po. The voice is calibrated; the opinions are real. If something matters and you want a human to handle it, ask and one will.

Two doors. One company.

Pip handles the homeowner side. Po handles the professional side. Whichever you are, the conversation starts here.