We finish what we start.
No second contractor.
The hardest part of water or fire damage isn’t drying it out — it’s putting your home back together. We carry the project from the emergency response to a finished, livable space. Our crews handle the drywall, paint, flooring, and finish work, and when the job calls for licensed electricians, plumbers, or HVAC contractors, we schedule and supervise them — so you never have to hire or chase a second contractor yourself.

The handoff is where most projects fall apart.
Most cleanup companies dry the house and leave. The rebuild contractor inherits a scope they didn’t write and has to renegotiate it with the adjuster. Schedules slip. Documentation disappears. The customer translates between three sets of people.
We removed the handoff. The project manager who wrote your estimate on day one is still on the job the day the last baseboard goes in.
- Water damage
Once the space is dry, the same crew picks up drywall, paint, baseboards, flooring.
- Fire & smoke
After soot containment and odor work, we rebuild the affected rooms or the full structure.
- Mold remediation
Once the affected materials are out and the area is verified clear, reconstruction starts immediately.
- Contents pack-out
We coordinate contents return with the reconstruction schedule so families don’t live in chaos.
- Asbestos & complex damage
Licensed abatement is scheduled inside the same project plan. Reconstruction begins as soon as the area is cleared.
From scope to final walkthrough.
- Step 01
Estimate
Detailed scope of work, line-itemed and priced, in the format insurance companies ask for.
- Step 02
Approvals
We negotiate our own scope and supplements with your adjuster. The claim stays in your name.
- Step 03
Schedule
Sequenced around trades, material lead times, and your family’s reality.
- Step 04
Selections
Where finishes need choosing, we walk you through them and document for the file.
- Step 05
Active build
Drywall, paint, flooring, baseboards, finish. The project manager checks the site daily.
- Step 06
Closeout
Walkthrough, punch list, signed completion. Every receipt in your portal.
A project manager on the job, every day.
Reconstruction is mostly about three things: scope discipline, trade sequencing, and communication. We do all three on purpose, because losing one of them turns a four-week job into a four-month job.
See the customer portalDaily on-site project manager
The project manager who wrote your estimate on day one is the same person walking the trades through the rebuild — in person, every day.
Scope discipline
We don’t expand the scope unless you sign off on it first. No surprises at invoice time.
Trade sequencing
Drywall before paint, paint before floor, floor before trim. Lining the trades up correctly is half the timeline.
Portal visibility
Every photo, scope, invoice, and approval lives in your private portal — for this job and every job we’ve done for you.
From sump failure to finished basement, without a single handoff.

1,400 sq ft of finished basement — drywall, paint, baseboards, floor — rebuilt by the same company that pumped the water out.
“Whole-home reconstruction after water damage. Working with one company instead of coordinating multiple contractors was a huge relief. They finished on schedule and everything looks amazing.”
What homeowners actually ask before they sign.
Will my insurance cover the rebuild?
Coverage is between you and your insurance company — we can’t speak for them. What we do: write the rebuild scope in the format insurance companies ask for, document every line item, and meet your adjuster on site. Complete files remove the most common cause of delay, and most homeowners never pay more than their deductible.
How long will the rebuild take?
Depends on size and trade complexity. A single-room rebuild is 1–2 weeks. Whole-floor rebuilds: 6–12 weeks. Whole-home or major fire losses: 3–6 months. We give you a real date once you’ve signed off on the plan.
Can I stay in the house during reconstruction?
Sometimes. Depends on the rooms involved and the trade schedule. We’ll talk through what makes sense — sometimes a 3-day hotel stay during the loudest week is the right call.
Do I have to use you for the rebuild if you did the cleanup?
No. You can take the rebuild to any contractor you choose. Most of our customers keep us on because the handoff between companies is the part that wrecks most projects.
Can I choose finishes?
Yes. We walk you through selections for paint, flooring, trim, and fixtures where the scope allows. Decisions get documented so they don’t become disputes later.
What if the scope grows during the rebuild?
We submit a supplement to your insurance company, document the reason, and don’t start the extra work until you’ve signed off on it. You don’t pay for surprises.
One team, start to finish.
Whether you’re in the middle of a cleanup or comparing reconstruction companies, a project manager will walk through the damage with you and tell you what makes sense. The inspection and estimate are free, and you approve the scope and the price before any work starts.
