Tailored Square Footage for Your Michigan Home
Sometimes, you don’t need a whole new wing—you just need that one perfect space to make your home functional again. Whether it’s a dedicated home office, a main-floor guest room, or a larger dining area for family gatherings, we specialize in room additions that blend perfectly with your existing home in Genesee and Oakland Counties.
Home Office Additions: Create a quiet, professional environment away from the noise of the main house, complete with custom built-ins and high-speed data wiring.
Main-Floor Laundry & Mudrooms: Organize the chaos with a dedicated entry point featuring custom lockers, utility sinks, and durable flooring.
Expanded Dining Rooms: Open up your floor plan to accommodate larger tables and holiday hosting without the “cramped” feeling.
Guest Bedrooms: Add a private, comfortable space for visitors or growing children, complete with integrated closet space.
Hobby & Flex Rooms: From home gyms to crafting studios, we build rooms designed specifically for how you live.
A successful room addition shouldn’t look like an afterthought. Our design team ensures that your new siding, windows, and roofing match your current home perfectly. Inside, we focus on matching trim and flooring so the transition from the old space to the new is invisible.
Structural Engineering: Ensuring your new room is tied correctly into the existing foundation.
HVAC & Comfort: We don’t just “tap into” your air vents; we ensure your new room is properly insulated and climate-controlled for Michigan winters.
Local Compliance: We handle all permits and inspections for Flint, Grand Blanc, Clarkston, and Oxford homeowners.
Adding onto your home is a major investment. We’ve refined a "no-surprises" workflow to ensure the process is as smooth as the final result.
We begin by visiting your home in Grand Blanc, Clarkston, or Fenton to assess your lot lines, existing foundation, and structural integrity. We’ll determine the best way to "tie in" the new room to your current floor plan.
Our team creates a plan that prioritizes flow. We look at how light enters the room, how traffic moves through the house, and how to maintain the exterior’s "curb appeal."
A room addition is only useful if it’s comfortable. We ensure your existing heating and cooling systems can handle the new square footage, or we install high-efficiency, independent climate control (like mini-split systems) to keep the space perfect year-round.
We treat your home with respect. Using HEPA-filtered dust extraction and floor protection, we keep the construction zone contained, so your family can continue their daily routine with minimal interruption.
Don't settle for a home that doesn't fit your life anymore. Let’s discuss how a custom room addition can provide the space you need without the hassle of moving.
While a home addition usually refers to a multi-room project (like a master suite or second story), a room addition (or “bump-out”) is a focused project designed to expand or add a single specific area. It is often the most cost-effective way to gain significant living space.
While adding square footage can affect your assessment, the increase in your home’s resale value almost always outweighs the tax adjustment. It’s an investment in your home’s long-term equity.
Absolutely. Whether your home is on a basement, crawlspace, or slab, we can engineer a foundation that matches and supports your new space.
This is our specialty. We source materials—from shingles and siding to brick and trim—that match your home’s current profile. For interior transitions, we use a technique called “feathering” to blend new flooring and paint with the old, ensuring the remodeled space feels like it has always been there.
Every municipality in Genesee and Oakland County has “setback” laws that dictate how close you can build to your property line. As part of our pre-construction phase, we pull your property plat and handle the zoning verification for Fenton, Holly, or Oxford to ensure your addition is 100% legal and compliant.
Generally, “building out” (a ground-level addition) is more cost-effective because it doesn’t require reinforcing the existing first-floor walls to support a second story. However, if your yard space is limited, “building up” may be the better investment. We provide a structural analysis for both options during our initial consultation.