Argus Branding, Communication + Design / 415.247.2800 / thisisargus.com / twitter: https://twitter.com/th

Branding and wayfinding belong in schematic design, not in construction documents.When the experiential layer enters lat...
04/22/2026

Branding and wayfinding belong in schematic design, not in construction documents.
When the experiential layer enters late, it doesn't complement the architecture — it compensates for it. Signage gets layered over decisions that have already foreclosed better options, and the result is a building that communicates in spite of itself.
Integrated early, wayfinding becomes an extension of the organizational logic already embedded in the plan. Hierarchy, threshold, sequence, material — these do the work before anyone reads a word. The signage that follows simply confirms what the architecture has already said.

A place is legible when a first-time visitor can quickly understand where they are, where to go next, and what the place...
04/21/2026

A place is legible when a first-time visitor can quickly understand where they are, where to go next, and what the place is for — without having to work for it.

That ease matters in leasing tours, stakeholder walkthroughs, and any public-facing moment.

A simple 3-part check:
1. Arrival — can someone orient within ~10 seconds?
2. Decision points — is guidance present where choices happen?
3. Repeatable cues — do identity, materials, and signage reinforce each other?

Legibility is a practical risk-reduction tool.

There's a moment we never want someone to have in a building that's supposed to support them.That pause at the door. The...
04/14/2026

There's a moment we never want someone to have in a building that's supposed to support them.
That pause at the door. The quiet scan of the room — trying to figure out where to go without looking lost. For someone already carrying something heavy, it can feel like one more thing saying this wasn't made for you.
What we want instead is a first visit that feels like a small exhale. A space that quietly says: you're in the right place — here's where to go next.
For people who've experienced homelessness, housing instability, or just a long hard stretch — that kind of clarity isn't a design nicety. It's a form of welcome.

When funding closes, the project stops being hypothetical.Schedules tighten. Stakeholders multiply. And what used to liv...
04/08/2026

When funding closes, the project stops being hypothetical.
Schedules tighten. Stakeholders multiply. And what used to live in decks starts showing up in public — on fences, at the curb, and in front of officials.
That’s when branding stops being about taste and becomes risk reduction: approvals, stakeholder clarity, and a cohesive lived experience from arrival to hallway to home.
Here’s the pressure test I use:
Can the project be described in one clear sentence that makes sense to both a neighbor and a city reviewer?
If you’re heading into ex*****on, we wrote the practical roadmap here: https://bit.ly/4e5VgW9

04/06/2026

Argus partnered with BRIDGE Housing and Insight Housing to unify The Hope Center and Berkeley Way into a cohesive, community-centered experience—transforming two distinct developments into a seamless expression of purpose, identity, and place. Through strategic branding, custom signage, commemorative storytelling, and artistic integration, we created a warm, human-scaled environment that honors history while fostering dignity and connection. This included curating and commissioning local artwork—featuring a dimensional entry mural by Fernanda Martinez and over 25 pieces by local artists—alongside a custom Arts and Crafts-inspired typeface and material palette that reinforce a shared vision rooted in resilience, inclusivity, and the spirit of Berkeley.

The project was featured on the latest episode of America and “demonstrates architectural compassion through creating a dignified ‘Continuum of Housing’ for its community.”

View the full episode, which features LMSA Senior Associate Corey Schnobrich along with CEO Calleene Egan and BRIDGE Housing Executive Vice President Smitha Seshadri for a tour of the award winning building!

View episode 5 here: https://bit.ly/HopeCenterBerkeleyWay

Clients: BRIDGE Housing Corporation &
Architecture:
Builder: Nibbi
Landscape: Cliff Lowe Associates
Structural:
Civil: Luk & Associates
MEP: Emerald City Engineers
Acoustics: Salter
Branding and Artwork Program:

03/26/2026

Funding close is when everything gets more complicated—more stakeholders, tighter timelines, and less room for misalignment.
Branding is how you get ahead of it. Not a logo. A system that protects your vision and carries into your next opportunity.
If you’re approaching funding close, now is a good time to start the conversation. 🔗 Link in bio.

Thank you, veterans, for protecting our freedoms and inspiring us with your strength.
11/11/2025

Thank you, veterans, for protecting our freedoms and inspiring us with your strength.

10/02/2025

Such a fun day!!! So proud to be involved!

Looking forward to this opening tomorrow! Thanks for the shout out, Van Meter Williams Pollack LLP!!
09/25/2025

Looking forward to this opening tomorrow!
Thanks for the shout out, Van Meter Williams Pollack LLP!!

08/13/2025

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