Baker Law Group LLC announced that Senior Associate Jonathan Berjikian has been added in 2026 as a liaison to the American Institute of Architects Contract Documents Committee, joining firm founder Jeremy S. Baker, who has served in the liaison role since 2015. The AIA Contract Documents Committee drafts, revises and maintains the AIA's standard form agreements used across the design and construction industry, including owner-architect, owner-contractor, design-build and consultant agreements.
As liaisons, Baker and Berjikian will provide practitioner feedback on draft language, flag contracting issues that arise in day-to-day project work and contribute to discussions that inform future editions of the AIA documents. "It's a huge honor for Jonathan, and I'm excited to work with him in this new capacity," Baker said. "The liaison role lets us bring real project issues back into the drafting conversations, which is where the documents either stay practical or drift away from practice."
Berjikian, a senior associate at Baker Law, advises project participants on contract negotiation and project risk across delivery methods, including the AIA's commonly used standard forms. "I'm grateful for the opportunity and for the help from Jeremy and the AIA," Berjikian said. "AIA documents shape how teams allocate risk and solve problems, and I'm looking forward to contributing feedback that reflects what we see on active projects."
The committee's work draws on a consensus process that involves multiple industry perspectives and is supported by AIA staff counsel and subject-matter contributors. The committee typically reviews and updates its core documents on a 10-year cycle; widely used editions such as the A201 and B101 forms were released in 2017. Baker Law said the liaison work is timely as the AIA develops its next comprehensive update, targeted for release in 2027.
The addition of Berjikian gives Baker Law the notable distinction of having two liaisons to the committee. This representation bolsters the firm's ability to shape AIA agenda and represent client interests in the next comprehensive update. For business and technology leaders in construction and real estate development, this development signals that practical, project-level insights from legal practitioners will have increased influence on the forthcoming standard contracts that govern billions of dollars in projects annually. The 2027 update will likely address evolving project delivery methods, risk allocation trends, and dispute resolution approaches that have emerged since the last major revision.


