Entrance hallway leading to a living room with large glass sliding doors showing a view of trees outside. Indoor decor includes a tall plant in a ceramic pot, wooden furniture, and natural lighting creating warm shadows.

about

Why Spatial Clarity Exists

Most homeowners hire an architect and then spend the next several months nodding at plans they don't fully understand. They approve layouts based on square footage and gut instinct. They sign off on designs that feel fine — until construction starts and something doesn't sit right.

A house is one of the few decisions people live inside every day. And most of the spatial decisions that shape that experience are made on paper, quickly, without a framework for perceiving them.

That gap between what a plan shows and what a home actually feels like to live in is real. And it's almost never addressed directly.

I'm Jason McKissick — with decades of experience across residential construction and design. Fully custom homes, production builds, ADUs, remodels. I've worked across the full spectrum, from high-end custom to thoughtfully designed attainable homes.

Spatial principles don't change with budget. But how they get applied
and what gets sacrificed
when they don't, looks
very different depending
on where you are on that
spectrum.

The problem isn't
intelligence. It's framework.

Most people have never
been taught how to read a
floor plan as a lived experience. Spatial Clarity gives you that framework.

Jason McKissick, founder of Spatial Clarity, helps homeowners visualize their homes before construction begins. Specializing in custom homes, ADUs, remodels, and plan reviews.