Hear from Our Customers
You’re not looking for the cheapest bid. You’re looking for the one that doesn’t come back to haunt you six months later.
When your kitchen remodel is done, you want cabinets that close properly, countertops that sit level, and tile work that doesn’t crack because someone rushed the substrate. You want a bathroom where the shower doesn’t leak and the vanity doesn’t wobble. You want a basement that feels like part of your home, not a half-finished afterthought.
That’s what happens when the same licensed team handles your project from start to finish. No subcontractors bouncing between jobs. No miscommunication about who’s responsible for what. Just consistent craftsmanship across every phase—spackling, painting, carpentry, flooring, plumbing connections, electrical rough-ins.
Your home value goes up because the work was done right. Your stress level goes down because you weren’t managing a rotating cast of strangers. And when you walk through your finished space, it actually looks like the photos you saved—not a compromised version of them.
We’ve been handling interior projects across Suffolk County since 2016. We’re fully licensed, and we keep our entire crew in-house. That means when you call with a question, you’re talking to someone who was actually on-site.
Most homeowners in Calverton aren’t renovating for fun. You’re dealing with a kitchen that stopped working for your family three years ago. Or a bathroom that’s become a source of anxiety every time guests visit. Or a basement that’s just wasted square footage because it never got finished properly.
We’ve seen what happens when contractors overpromise and underdeliver. We’ve walked into half-finished projects where the previous guy stopped returning calls. And we’ve heard the same frustrations enough times to know what matters most to you: clear communication, honest pricing, and work that actually gets completed on schedule. That’s what we’re set up to deliver.
You reach out, and we schedule a time to see your space. Not a sales pitch—an actual conversation about what you’re trying to accomplish and what’s realistic for your budget and timeline.
We measure, take notes, and ask questions about how you use the space. Then we put together a detailed estimate that breaks down materials, labor, and timeline. No vague line items. No surprises later.
Once you’re ready to move forward, we handle the permits if your project needs them. Suffolk County has specific requirements depending on scope, and we make sure everything’s filed correctly before work starts.
Then our crew shows up. Same team, every day, until the job’s done. We protect your floors and furniture, contain dust as much as physically possible, and clean up at the end of each day. If something changes mid-project, we talk through it before making the call—not after.
When we’re finished, we walk the space with you. You point out anything that needs adjustment, and we handle it before we consider the job complete. Then we pack up, haul away the debris, and leave you with a space that’s actually ready to use.
Ready to get started?
We handle full kitchen remodels—cabinets, countertops, backsplash, flooring, lighting, the works. In Suffolk County, a mid-range kitchen renovation typically runs between $23,000 and $40,000 depending on finishes and layout changes. That investment usually returns 70-80% when you sell, but more importantly, it makes your daily routine less frustrating right now.
Bathroom renovations are another major focus. A full remodel with new tile, vanity, toilet, and shower starts around $21,000 for a standard-size bath. If you’re adding features like heated floors or a walk-in shower with custom tile work, you’re looking closer to $40,000 and up.
Basement finishing turns unusable square footage into actual living space. We frame walls, install flooring, add lighting and outlets, finish drywall, and handle trim carpentry. Homeowners in Calverton are increasingly converting basements into home offices, gyms, or extra bedrooms—especially as property values continue climbing and moving up isn’t financially practical.
We also handle smaller-scale projects: custom built-ins, flooring replacement, interior painting, crown molding, wainscoting. If it’s inside your home and it requires a licensed contractor, we can handle it. And because we’re not juggling exterior work, we’re not disappearing for three weeks because weather delayed someone else’s siding job.
In Suffolk County, you legally need a licensed home improvement contractor for any project over $500. But the real question isn’t about the legal threshold—it’s about what happens when something goes wrong.
Licensed contractors in New York contribute to a trust fund that reimburses homeowners if the contractor damages your property and disappears. Unlicensed contractors don’t. So if someone cuts a joist they shouldn’t have, or floods your basement because they didn’t understand your plumbing setup, you’re stuck with the bill and no recourse.
Beyond liability, licensed contractors pull permits for work that requires them. That matters when you sell. Home inspectors flag unpermitted work, and buyers either walk away or demand price reductions to cover the cost of bringing everything up to code. A kitchen or bathroom remodel done without permits can cost you thousands in lost equity, even if the work itself looks fine.
A full kitchen remodel typically takes four to six weeks from demo to completion. That assumes no major surprises like rotted subfloor or outdated electrical that needs upgrading to handle new appliances.
Bathrooms usually take three to four weeks. The tile work is what takes time—proper installation can’t be rushed. You need to let thinset cure, let grout cure, let waterproofing membranes set up. Contractors who promise a full bath in ten days are either skipping steps or running multiple jobs simultaneously and bouncing between them.
Delays happen when materials arrive damaged or back-ordered, when we open a wall and find something that needs immediate attention, or when you change your mind about a finish mid-project. We build a small buffer into every timeline, but the tighter your schedule, the less flexibility you have if something unexpected comes up. If you’re working around a specific deadline—guests coming, a home sale, whatever—tell us upfront so we can plan accordingly.
For a kitchen, plan on $23,000 minimum if you’re doing a modest refresh—cabinet refacing, new countertops, updated appliances, fresh paint. A full remodel with new cabinets, countertops, backsplash, flooring, and lighting typically lands between $30,000 and $50,000. High-end kitchens with custom cabinetry and premium finishes can push past $70,000.
Bathrooms start around $15,000 for a basic refresh in a small space. A full remodel with new tile, vanity, toilet, and shower runs $21,000 to $40,000 for a standard-size bathroom. Luxury upgrades—heated floors, frameless glass shower enclosures, custom tile work—push costs higher.
The biggest variable is finishes. A prefab vanity costs $800. A custom one costs $3,500. Ceramic tile costs $4 per square foot. Marble costs $18. The labor to install them is roughly the same, but your material choices swing the budget dramatically. We walk through all of this during the estimate so you know exactly where your money’s going and where you have flexibility to adjust.
Our crew handles everything in-house—framing, drywall, carpentry, painting, flooring, tile work. We don’t subcontract those core trades. That’s unusual, and it’s one of the main reasons our projects stay on schedule and our communication stays consistent.
We do bring in licensed specialists for plumbing and electrical when the scope requires it. Those are trades that require specific licenses in New York, and we work with the same guys on every project. They know our standards, they show up when they say they will, and they don’t disappear for two weeks because they’re juggling six other jobs.
The problem with subcontractors isn’t the quality of their work—it’s the coordination. When a general contractor is just managing subs, you’re dealing with scheduling conflicts, miscommunication between trades, and finger-pointing when something doesn’t go as planned. We eliminate most of that by keeping the work in-house. You’re dealing with one team, one point of contact, and one company responsible for the entire project.
We talk through it before making any changes. If you want to swap tile, adjust a layout, add a feature—whatever—we stop and walk through what that means for timeline and budget.
Some changes are simple. Swapping one paint color for another costs nothing if we catch it before we start. Swapping tile might cost nothing if the new tile is the same price and we haven’t ordered yet. But if we’ve already demoed and framed for a 36-inch vanity, and you want to go up to 48 inches, that’s a real change. We need to reframe, adjust plumbing rough-ins, possibly move electrical. That adds time and cost.
We’re not going to nickel-and-dime you over minor adjustments, but we’re also not going to eat the cost of major changes and then resent the project. We put it in writing, you approve it, and then we move forward. No surprises on the final bill, no arguments about what was or wasn’t agreed to. Just clear communication and documentation so everyone’s on the same page.
If your project requires a permit, we pull it. Suffolk County requires permits for most structural work, electrical and plumbing changes, and any project that affects your home’s footprint or systems.
A kitchen remodel usually needs permits if you’re moving plumbing or gas lines, adding new electrical circuits, or removing walls. A bathroom remodel needs permits for similar reasons. Basement finishing almost always requires permits because you’re adding living space.
We handle the paperwork, schedule the inspections, and make sure everything passes. If an inspector flags something, we correct it and call for a re-inspection. This is part of the job, not an extra service we charge separately for.
Skipping permits is a gamble that’s not worth taking. It voids your homeowner’s insurance if something goes wrong. It complicates your sale when a buyer’s inspector asks for permit records. And it leaves you liable if the work doesn’t meet code and causes damage down the road. We do it right the first time so you don’t have to worry about any of that.