The engineer behind your stamp

When you submit a stamped gas riser diagram to a building department, you're vouching for the engineer behind it. Here's who that is.

Your diagram is drawn, reviewed, and stamped by Miles Dake, who is both a licensed architect and a licensed professional engineer. That combination matters: Miles reads the architectural plans and the building systems with equal fluency, which is exactly what gas sizing demands. Every diagram that leaves our office has been verified by a licensed engineer against the fuel gas code your jurisdiction enforces: in Denver, the Denver Fuel Gas Code, and elsewhere in the metro, the locally adopted edition of the International Fuel Gas Code. That stamp isn't a formality. It's a licensed professional putting his name on the sizing.

Read Miles's full bio at Dake Collaborative →

Part of a broader practice

Gas riser diagrams are one service of Dake Collaborative, an architecture and engineering firm serving general contractors and architects across the Denver metro. We built this service to do one thing exceptionally well: get you a permit-ready, stamped diagram fast, through a process refined to be both quick and accurate. But many of the contractors and architects who come to us for a gas diagram are juggling bigger architectural, mechanical, electrical, and plumbing needs on the same project. If that's you, we can help with more than the diagram.

Built for the people who hate the back-and-forth

We designed this around how GCs and architects actually work. You send what you already have, including photos, floor plans, and an appliance list, then answer a few quick questions. We handle the rest from our office; there's no site visit to coordinate. Most residential projects come back stamped within two business days, at a flat rate you know before you start.

Need more than a gas diagram?

If you've got a larger architecture or engineering scope on your project, tell us about it. We're happy to talk.

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