WordPress Website Design for Architecture Firm Client: Jay Baker Architects | Houston, TX
Project Role
WordPress Website Design for Architecture Firm
- Architecture Firm Website Development
- Custom Portfolio Gallery Build
- WordPress CMS Configuration
- On-Site SEO Optimization
- Performance Optimization
- Mobile-Responsive Design
Jay Baker Architects is a Houston, Texas architecture firm led by Jay Baker, FAIA — elected Fellow of the American Institute of Architects in 2002 for design excellence — with more than three decades of award-recognized work in residential and civic architecture. The firm is perhaps best known beyond its project portfolio for Jay Baker’s role in catalyzing the revitalization of Houston’s Hermann Park: a design competition he initiated in 1992 that produced a city council-adopted Master Plan and over $120 million in public improvements to one of Texas’s most-visited urban parks. That civic legacy, alongside a refined body of residential architecture, defines the caliber of practice the website needed to represent.
Chainlink’s role on this project was full website design and development — building a platform from the ground up capable of doing justice to Jay Baker’s body of work. Using WordPress as the CMS foundation and WP Rocket for performance optimization, we designed an image-led site structured around a portfolio of 19+ completed projects. The design approach mirrors the firm’s own ethos: minimal, considered, and entirely in service of the work. Navigation is deliberately lean — Ethos, Portfolio, Bio, Hermann Park, Unnecessary Projects, Contact — with no decorative elements competing for attention with the photography.
The result is a digital presence that accurately reflects the caliber of a 30-year FAIA-led architectural practice. The portfolio gallery functions as a primary business development tool, presenting completed work through large-format photography with minimal editorial interference. The Hermann Park page functions as civic credential — a long-form document that signals Jay Baker’s standing not just as an architect, but as a significant figure in Houston’s urban design history. For a firm that wins work through reputation and referral, the website now functions as the professional validation a high-caliber prospect expects to find.
Challenge & Solution
The Challenge
The Solution
Architecture Portfolio Gallery
The portfolio gallery is the centerpiece of the site — a curated grid of residential and civic projects, each opening into a full-bleed image experience. Rather than leading with written descriptions, the layout lets photography carry the narrative, consistent with the firm’s ethos of craft over copy. For a practice at Jay Baker’s level, this image-forward presentation directly supports how prospective clients evaluate architectural talent and decide whether to make contact.



Brand Philosophy & Principal Bio Pages
The Ethos and Bio pages were built as editorial long-form reads, pairing large-format photography with structured copy that communicates the firm’s design philosophy and founder credentials. The Ethos page articulates Jay Baker’s “Architecture of Circumstance” methodology; the Bio establishes his FAIA designation, Rice University pedigree, and decades of civic leadership. Together they give prospective clients the philosophical and biographical context to understand who they’d be hiring before a single conversation takes place.



Mobile-Responsive Architect Website Design
The image-heavy portfolio demanded a mobile experience that didn’t sacrifice visual impact for screen size. Every page — from the portfolio grid to full-bleed project galleries — was built responsive-first, ensuring large-format photography scales cleanly across all devices. For an architecture firm whose prospective clients frequently browse on mobile, a frictionless cross-device experience is a direct contributor to new inquiries and first impressions.





Hermann Park Civic Legacy Page
Few firms can claim a civic legacy of this scale. Jay Baker’s “Heart of the Park” competition in 1992 catalyzed a Master Plan adopted by Houston City Council, driving $120M+ in Hermann Park improvements over 25 years. Chainlink built this as a long-form interview page — archival photography, pull quotes from FASLA Master Planner Laurie Olin, competition history, and award credits — cementing Jay Baker’s standing among Houston’s most consequential civic designers.




WordPress CMS & WP Rocket Performance Setup
The site was built on WordPress and paired with WP Rocket for caching and page speed optimization — critical for an image-rich portfolio loading high-resolution photography on every page. The CMS gives Jay Baker’s team full control over adding new projects and updating content without developer involvement. Fast load times and a clean CMS architecture lay the foundation for long-term SEO performance and client-facing reliability.




Unnecessary Projects Personal Gallery
Unnecessary Projects is a masonry gallery of Jay Baker’s personal work — sketches, models, renderings, and photographs made outside any client commission. Described by the firm as “anecdotal evidence of gratitude for a life making things,” the gallery humanizes Baker as a designer and thinker, not just an architect for hire. For a practice that attracts clients through cultural alignment as much as credential, this page does quietly significant brand-building work.




Architecture Firm Website Design: Common Questions
An architecture firm website should lead with a portfolio gallery that presents completed projects through large-format photography, organized by type — residential, civic, commercial. Supporting pages should establish the principal’s credentials and design philosophy, with a bio, awards, and civic work documented in detail. Navigation should be minimal and deliberate: portfolio, ethos, bio, and contact are sufficient for most firms. A fast-loading, mobile-responsive build is essential, as prospective clients frequently evaluate firms on mobile before making contact.
A custom WordPress website for an architecture firm typically takes 8–14 weeks from kickoff to launch, depending on the size of the portfolio and the volume of original copy and photography being produced. For Jay Baker Architects, Chainlink built and launched a full site featuring 19+ portfolio projects, custom page templates, and a long-form civic legacy section within that window. Timeline is most often driven by content readiness on the client side — firms that have professional photography organized by project move significantly faster.
WordPress is the most practical CMS for architecture firm portfolio sites because it gives the firm full control over adding new projects, updating copy, and managing photography without developer involvement. Chainlink pairs WordPress with WP Rocket for caching and performance optimization, which keeps load times fast even on image-heavy pages loading high-resolution photography. The combination of a flexible CMS and performance tooling is particularly important for portfolio-driven sites where large image files are unavoidable.
A custom architecture firm website from a professional agency typically ranges from $15,000 to $35,000+, depending on the number of portfolio projects, custom page templates, integrations, and the volume of content and photography being organized. Firms with established photography archives and organized project documentation tend to see lower costs than those building their content library from scratch. Chainlink builds custom WordPress sites for architecture firms and design professionals — contact us to discuss scope and pricing for your practice.
An architecture portfolio website should be designed around the work, not around the agency that built it. Full-bleed photography, minimal navigation, and fast-loading image delivery are the foundation. Each project page should open into an immersive image experience with minimal editorial copy competing for attention. Chainlink built Jay Baker Architects’ portfolio gallery as a curated grid that opens into full-bleed project pages — letting the photography carry the narrative rather than leading with written descriptions, which aligns with how high-caliber prospects evaluate architectural talent.
Yes — for firms that win work through reputation and referral, a website functions primarily as professional validation. When a prospective client is referred to a firm or finds them through a search, the website is the first thing they evaluate before making contact. A portfolio that presents completed work through strong photography, paired with a principal bio that establishes credentials and civic standing, gives the referral confidence to move forward. For Jay Baker Architects, the site was built specifically to match the caliber of the practice — so that the digital presence reflects what a high-caliber prospect expects to find.