About LBA

OUR CLIENT/ASSOCIATES LIST


Rutenberg Homes

US Home Corp.

Ranon & Partners

Heery International

FleischmannGarcia

Gresham Smith & Partners

Harvard Jolly Clees Toppe

Straughn Trout & Associates

Bullock Tice Architects

The Reliable Group

Jim Walter Homes

R.R. Simmons Corp.

Bacon Group, Inc.

Wm. Henry & Associates

Alvarez Homes, Inc.

Architectural Associates

Chancey Bowen Architects

DLR Group

Hand Enterprises

Rojo Architecture

Curtis Gaines Hall Jones, Inc.

GROH Architects, Inc.


LB Architectural

is an illustration studio located in Tampa, Florida  and produces a wide range of
illustration

projects.

LB Architectural Renderings can be rendered in black and white or color, in mediums of pencil, soft graphite, pen and ink, watercolor, oil and casein. All can be further modified with our Compucolor techniques and other modifications for exciting possibilities.

They are generally used for architectural sales and advertising marketing, for architectural design and construction approvals and for reminiscing favorite historic projects. We can provide ground level, interior, aerial and historic themes. 


Our technical illustrations, illustrating maps, or other visuals can range to the limits of your imagination...

or ours!

Our renderings can be completed quickly for virtually any construction and design project. The completed rendering is done in a style that fulfills your needs and coincides with the imagination and dreams of your customer. Client approvals can come surprisingly quickly!



All renderings are scanned in high resolution, based on your project needs.

After determining your presentation requirements, we can provide additional options or even assemble additional detail views.


If you don’t have full working architectural drawings or CAD files, but still need to present a conceptual rendering, LB Architectural can provide finished renderings regardless. 


Being hand-drawn, or hand-illustrated our illustrations can be produced without those time-consuming and expensive pre-requisites. If you are planning on making a proposal for a more

complicated future project, that might even need publicly financed funds, do you outlay the money for the CAD work ?



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