FrameBridge is the bidding platform built for architects who manage construction projects in New York City. Post scope, collect bids, level proposals — all in one place.
"Every construction bidding tool was built for contractors. FrameBridge was built for the architect managing the whole project — from first scope to signed contract."
Not how software vendors imagine you work.
Define your project scope, upload drawings and construction documents, set bid requirements. Architects control the signal, not the noise.
Side-by-side bid leveling with scope alignment. Spot outliers, compare line items, make decisions with data — not email threads.
Share drawing sets, specs, and construction documents with every contractor. Version-controlled, timestamped, organized by project.
Building Alteration Agreement filing status surfaced alongside your bids. NYC DOB workflow visibility built in, not bolted on.
Contractor profiles with portfolio reviews, completed project photos, and license verification. Know who you're inviting before you invite them.
Built for five-borough contractors. Respects NYC permit requirements, DOB filing schedules, and the pace of a real New York construction project.
Upload your scope of work, drawings, and any existing construction documents. Set your bid deadline and requirements.
Local NYC contractors review your project, ask clarifying questions through the platform, and submit structured bids.
FrameBridge levels all bids side-by-side. See scope alignment, price breakdown, and contractor track records in one view.
Award the project, send contracts, and track BAA filing status alongside construction milestones — all in the same workspace.
"We managed our last three projects over email and spreadsheets. FrameBridge is the tool we wished existed — designed for architects, not software engineers."
FrameBridge puts architects in control of the full bidding lifecycle — from first scope to signed contract — without the overhead of enterprise project management software.
The NYC construction market is worth $25.8 billion. Local architects deserve a tool built for how they actually work.