What this service solves
Every whole home project starts with a clear picture of what needs to change and why. Describe the space, share what is working and what is not, and identify your priorities — comfort, storage, safety, resale value, or a full transformation. The more specific you are, the more useful your estimate conversation can be.
Multi-room interior updates and finish standardization
Kitchen, bathroom, flooring, trim, and paint coordination
Layout changes, storage, accessibility, and family workflow improvements
Common projects
Multi-room interior updates and finish standardization
Kitchen, bathroom, flooring, trim, and paint coordination
Layout changes, storage, accessibility, and family workflow improvements
Pre-move-in updates and phased renovation plans
Options and approaches
Phased renovation
Breaks work into practical phases so budget, living arrangements, and decisions stay manageable.
Pre-move-in reset
Prioritizes high-disruption work before furniture and daily routines are in place.
Full coordination
Aligns multiple rooms, finishes, trades, and inspections under one scope.
Your planning process
- 1
Describe the room, the problem, your goals, your town, your timing, and your budget range.
- 2
Share photos or notes about existing conditions, layout, access, and anything that feels urgent.
- 3
Identify what matters most: cost, timeline, durability, design, storage, safety, or resale readiness.
- 4
Receive a clearer path for comparing scope options, requesting an estimate, or scheduling a walkthrough.
Cost factors
The right estimate depends on existing conditions, finish choices, trade requirements, and town-specific requirements. These are the factors to clarify first:
- Number of rooms, finish level, and whether systems are touched
- Wall changes, structural review, and trade coordination
- Temporary living needs, dust control, and site protection
- Consistency of flooring, doors, trim, paint, and fixtures
Timeline factors
- How many trades need to be sequenced
- Whether the home is occupied during work
- Long-lead materials such as cabinets, windows, or specialty fixtures
- Permit and inspection requirements for layout or system changes
Maintenance and care
- Keep a finish schedule for future repairs or additions.
- Photograph closed-wall areas before drywall where practical.
- Plan touch-up paint and spare flooring storage after completion.
FAQs
How do I know if I need a refresh, a remodel, or a full replacement?
Start with what is bothering you most about the space. A refresh tackles finishes and fixtures when the layout works. A remodel changes multiple surfaces and may adjust layout. A full replacement is right when structure, systems, or major changes are needed. Share what you know and your request will help clarify which scope fits.
What affects the cost of whole-home renovations in Connecticut?
Number of rooms, finish level, and whether systems are touched; Wall changes, structural review, and trade coordination; Temporary living needs, dust control, and site protection; and the condition of the existing space all affect pricing. The best next step is to share project details so scope and priorities can be reviewed honestly.
Will I need permits for this project?
Permit requirements depend on your town and the scope. Structural changes, plumbing, electrical, mechanical work, and some exterior projects may require permits or inspections. Your planning conversation should identify these questions early so there are no surprises later.
What happens after I send my project details?
Your request is reviewed with your actual scope in mind — the room, the problem, your timing, and your priorities. The next step is a real conversation about options, tradeoffs, and what to expect, grounded in what you shared, not a generic script.
Request a quote
Share what you know about your project. The more specific your scope, timing, and priorities, the more useful the follow-up conversation will be.