WS
An open construction journal entered our developments faster than most of the market got used to it. For a buyer, it’s the best tool to check whether a deadline is realistic.
An open construction journal entered our developments faster than most of the market got used to it. For a buyer, it’s the best tool to check whether a deadline is realistic.
When construction progress is open — with photos, dates and milestones — a question arises that used to be reserved for an engineer: whether the schedule holds together and whether the development is moving at a pace that will deliver the deadline.
The signal rarely lies in a single photo. It lies in the pace between milestones, in the dates matching the schedule from the contract, and in whether the developer also shows the weeks when nothing spectacular happened.
Warto wiedzieć — Construction journal · updated weekly
We update each development’s journal every week — even when progress is small. We show the actual state, not only striking shots.
Practical advice: treat the construction journal like a bank statement. If you know what happened each week and whether it matches the schedule, you’re in a much better position than a buyer who trusts the renderings alone.
The developer act and the Developer Guarantee Fund changed the rules in the buyer’s favour. The question is no longer "am I protected" but "how do I use that protection" — and many buyers don’t know.
ReadMost developers hide prices behind "ask for an offer". We do the opposite: we publish the price of every unit and its full price history. The more you know before the conversation, the better that conversation is.
ReadA handover looks innocent — an hour with a sheet of paper and a pen. But that’s when most of the decisions about what the developer fixes and what lands on you are made.
ReadFinishing an apartment can be done several ways. Each has a different cost, a different timeline and a different impact on when you actually move in.
Read