Open-concept renovated home interior

Services

Whole-Home Remodels

Kitchens, baths, structural reconfiguration, and full top-to-bottom renovations — by an in-house team, on a single contract.

A whole-home remodel done right is the most reliable way to get the home you want without the move. We handle design, permits, structural, mechanical, electrical, plumbing, finishes, and the punch list — under one contract, one schedule, one project manager. No subcontractor finger-pointing, no scope drift hidden in change orders, and no surprise reveals on day one of demo.

What this looks like

Kitchens

Cabinets, counters, appliances, plumbing, electrical, lighting. Open-concept reconfigurations including load-bearing wall removal where the structural answer holds up.

Bathrooms

Primary suites, guest baths, and powder rooms. Tile, fixtures, glass, vanities, lighting — done by trades that work for us, not for the cheapest bid that day.

Floor-plan reconfigurations

Open-concept, room reconfigurations, structural openings, ceiling vault-outs. We start with the framing answer, then build the design around it — never the other way around.

Full whole-home renos

Top-to-bottom transformations on dated homes. Phased so you can stage out (or live in select rooms) where it makes sense.

Common questions

How long does a whole-home remodel take?
Typical scope runs 4–9 months from contract to punch list, depending on permits, square footage, and lead times on cabinetry and tile. We give you a realistic schedule up front and update it weekly.
Do we need to move out?
It depends on scope. Kitchen-only remodels usually allow you to live in the home with workarounds; whole-home renos generally require relocation for at least the heaviest demo and dust phases.
How are change orders handled?
Every change order is documented in writing with the cost and schedule impact before work proceeds. No surprise charges at billing time.

Ready to talk through your project?

Free walkthrough, written proposal, transparent timeline. We'll tell you whether your scope is reasonable for your budget — and where the trade-offs are.