Notice of Violation
You received a code-enforcement letter or municipal notice and need to understand the architectural implications.
ESSENCE ADVISORY · SPECIALIZED SERVICE
Property violations & unpermitted work · Miami
Architect-led clarity for open notices, unpermitted work, expired permits and property records that no longer match existing conditions.
When records and reality no longer match
When a violation involves construction, altered conditions or unpermitted work, it cannot be resolved responsibly as paperwork alone. The building, the code, the corrective design, the permit documents and the work on site must tell the same story.
The architect leads that complete reading. We diagnose what exists, define the architectural response and coordinate the engineers, surveyors, contractors and municipal requirements that the specific case demands—so every discipline contributes to one buildable path rather than a collection of disconnected answers.
Recognize the situation
These are different problems, but they share one need: a precise comparison between the property, its records and the applicable path forward.
You received a code-enforcement letter or municipal notice and need to understand the architectural implications.
Work was completed without permits by you, a contractor or a previous owner.
An addition, enclosed patio, converted garage, accessory structure or interior alteration is absent from approved records.
A permit was never finalized, was abandoned or requires updated documentation and coordination.
The property may require architectural documentation together with structural or other specialist evaluation.
A record discrepancy appears before closing or while evaluating the real risk of a property.

Site and record review
Corrective work begins with evidence, not assumptions—and succeeds through coordinated professional responsibility.
Depending on the agreed scope, we review the notice and available permit history, examine the property, document relevant conditions and compare what is observed with the available drawings or records. This identifies the discrepancies that matter and the questions that require specialist confirmation.
An architect-led corrective path
We begin with the property address, correspondence, available records and the outcome the client needs to pursue.
Relevant existing work is documented and compared with the information available for the property.
We define likely architectural drawings, permits, modifications and specialist coordination.
When retained for the next phase, we prepare or coordinate the agreed documentation and support the applicable municipal process.
The Essence Method · Applied to corrective work
A corrective process should satisfy the technical and administrative need while protecting the architectural qualities that make the property worth keeping.
Protect light, proportion and spatial coherence when corrective changes are required.
Read shade, rain, ventilation and landscape conditions alongside compliance.
Distinguish original construction, later alterations and the right way to repair their junctions.
Coordinate life-safety, accessibility and daily comfort as part of the architectural response.
Pursue a clean record without erasing the qualities that give the property lasting value.
Documentation & coordination
The first review separates what is known from what still must be verified.
Our written direction can identify the apparent architectural issue, the records or measurements still needed, the likely corrective drawings, required professional disciplines and the sequence for moving forward. If you retain the studio, that direction becomes the basis for a defined proposal and coordinated scope.

Initial architectural consultation
Bring the notice, the address and the information you already have. Leave with a clearer understanding of the likely path.
The consultation is designed for owners, buyers, sellers, agents and investors who need direct architectural judgment before committing to a larger corrective scope.
Property Violation Consultation
Fully credited toward the related architectural project when Fernandez Architecture is retained within 30 days.
From uncertainty to a coordinated path
A notice is the beginning of the question—not the definition of the solution.
Property Violations · Miami
It is a condition in which a notice, permit history, public record or approved plan does not align with the work or use observed at the property. Common examples include additions, enclosed patios, converted garages, accessory structures, interior alterations or building systems completed without the required permit or without final closure.
An architect can review the available notice and records, document relevant existing conditions, identify apparent discrepancies and prepare or coordinate architectural drawings for the corrective permit process. Whether the work may remain, must be modified or requires removal depends on the property, code, jurisdiction and specialist findings.
An after-the-fact permit is a commonly used term for permitting work that was completed before the required approval or final inspection. The municipality may require existing-condition or as-built drawings, code review, engineering, product approvals, corrective work and inspections. The exact path depends on the jurisdiction, the work and whether the existing condition can comply.
When a violation involves construction, altered conditions or unpermitted work, the issue extends beyond paperwork. The architect connects the existing building, applicable requirements, corrective design, permit documentation and construction into one coordinated strategy, while bringing in engineers, contractors, surveyors or other specialists when their expertise is required.
Send the property address, the complete notice or correspondence, any available permit numbers or plans, a brief description of the work and clear photographs of the condition. This allows the first conversation to focus on the most relevant questions and likely next steps.
The consultation includes up to 60 minutes one-to-one with the architect, an initial review of the information supplied, a discussion of the likely architectural path, the documentation and specialists that may be required, and a concise written summary of recommended next steps. It does not include measured drawings, permit documents, engineering or municipal fees.
Yes. If Fernandez Architecture is retained for the related architectural project within 30 days of the consultation, the $295 consultation fee is credited toward the agreed professional fee.
No. Approval and closure decisions belong to the applicable authority and depend on the documented conditions, code requirements and any required specialist work. Our role is to provide a clear architectural assessment, prepare or coordinate the appropriate documentation and support the process professionally.
When the corrective path requires structural, civil, electrical, mechanical, plumbing, survey, inspection or other licensed expertise, we identify the need and can coordinate the appropriate professionals as part of a defined scope.
Fernandez Architecture is based in Miami Beach and serves properties across Miami, Miami Beach and Miami-Dade County. Requirements differ by municipality, so every property is reviewed in relation to its specific jurisdiction and records.