Practice · General Contracting
Whole-floor, whole-home, whole-building.
From a full kitchen renovation to a multi-floor commercial fit-out, we run the project end-to-end. Permits, trades, schedule, finishes — coordinated under one scope.
General contracting is the discipline that holds a renovation together. Most projects don’t fail in a single trade; they fail at the seams between them — the electrician who needs the framer to leave a chase, the tiler who needs the plumber back for a final, the cabinet shop that needed the stone template a week earlier. Our work is to make those seams disappear.
What we handle
Whole-home renovations
Layout changes, full strip-and-rebuild, additions, underpinning where structure allows. We sequence the work so the trades arrive in the right order.
Multi-trade coordination
Electrical, plumbing, HVAC, framing, drywall, tile, stone, cabinetry, finishes — booked, scheduled, and held to a shared calendar.
Permits & inspections
Toronto, Mississauga, Vaughan, Markham — we know each municipality's review rhythm and how to keep the project from sitting on a planner’s desk.
Project management
Weekly client briefs, written change orders, schedule reforecasts when reality demands them. Photo logs every Friday.
Budgeting & cost control
Itemised estimates with allowances called out, change orders priced before work proceeds, monthly cost-to-complete reporting on larger projects.
Notes from the GTA
- Most full renovations in Toronto's older housing stock surface unforeseens — knob-and-tube, balloon framing, lead supply, dropped joists. We carry a stated contingency rather than absorb the surprise.
- Toronto's Committee of Adjustment can add 8–14 weeks to a permit timeline; we sequence design and demolition so it isn't a bottleneck.
- Heritage districts (Cabbagetown, the Annex, Roncesvalles, parts of Riverdale) have specific facade and material rules we know in advance.
- Condo work requires building approval, certificate of insurance, and after-hours scheduling; we coordinate with property management from day one.
If your project involves more than one trade, you want a general contractor — and you want one who has run the project, not just the change orders.