We design a complete signage system and take full responsibility for its consistency and compliance with execution,
or we manufacture plaques based on a supplied design — exclusively after defined entry conditions are met.
The scope of responsibility for design-to-execution compliance is clearly defined and depends on whether the design
and its verification are handled by us.
What this means in practice
– If the design is on our side: we are responsible for system consistency, production files, and installation compatibility.
– If the design is supplied: we verify it for production and installation within an agreed scope
(formats, legibility, margins, safe areas, holes, axes).
– Without verification, we do not assume responsibility for substantive errors in the design.
Proof / mechanism
– Entry conditions include: file formats, dimensional definitions, material specification, content, and mounting axis layout.
– Prior to production, we require approval of: content, dimensions, mounting axes, and execution technology.
– Verification is defined as a scope: what we check and what the client approves.
Limits of responsibility
– We are responsible for compliance of execution with approved production files and specification.
– We are not responsible for incorrect content (e.g. names, numbering) if supplied and approved by the investor
without verification on our side.
– We are not responsible for a supplied design if it did not include installation arrangements
(axes, holes, tolerances) and was not subject to verification.
FAQ
– Can you manufacture plaques based on an architect’s design?
Yes, provided that entry conditions are met and the design is approved after production and installation verification.
– What does “verification for production” include?
Feasibility check: dimensions, safe areas, marking method, holes/axis alignment, tolerances.
– Do you verify substantive content?
Only if it is defined as a specific scope (e.g. system and nomenclature audit).