/ A small crew, no layers

The people you meet are the people who build.

Four to six people, mid-Atlantic residential work, no subcontracting layers. The crew on your site on day one is the same crew at final punch list.

Wide environmental shot of a mid-renovation kitchen gut, natural daylight from a large window on the left, exposed wall studs and rough plumbing visible, a worker's hands holding a level against a stud wall in the right foreground, neutral gray concrete subfloor, no staging or decoration
Wide environmental shot of a mid-renovation kitchen gut, natural daylight from a large window on the left, exposed wall studs and rough plumbing visible, a worker's hands holding a level against a stud wall in the right foreground, neutral gray concrete subfloor, no staging or decoration
— How we work

We start with the room, not the budget.

Every conversation opens with what you actually do in the space — how you cook, how the bathroom gets shared, what bothers you after ten years. Scope follows that.

We document the project from first demo through final walkthrough. Chronological photos, material records, and site notes go to you at close — not just to us.

Communication standard

If we find something behind the walls, we call before we proceed.

1-4 people

No rotating subcontractor crews. The same hands that demo the old tile set the new one.

Scope changes happen on residential jobs. What doesn't change is the protocol: you hear about it the same day, you see what we found, and we agree on the path forward before any work continues.

St Louis, MO Metro Area

We stay within a range we can drive to daily. No remote project management, no absentee oversight.

Honest material recommendations, written timelines, and a final walkthrough with you present. That's the standard on every project, kitchen or whole-home.

Ready to talk scope and timeline?

Tell us the room, the problem, and your rough window. We'll schedule a site visit from there — no worksheets required.