Interior Storm Restoration
Ceilings, walls, and floors rebuilt right after the mitigation team finishes
One Crew, One Phone Call, A Whole House Put Back Together
A bad storm does not stop at the roof. Wind drives water through ceilings, lightning takes out HVAC and ruins drywall, and the next morning you have soaked carpet, swollen baseboards, and a ceiling that is starting to sag. The roof we can fix in a few days. The mess inside takes longer, and most homeowners do not know where to start.What We Do, And What We Do Not
We rebuild interiors after a storm. Ceilings, walls, flooring, trim, paint. Everything you can see and touch inside the house, that is us. What we do not do is fire, water, or mold mitigation. That is a different trade with different licensing, different equipment, and different liability. Anyone telling you they handle every part of a storm restoration in-house is either subcontracting it without telling you or doing it wrong. We picked a lane and we stay in it. Instead, we work with licensed mitigation companies we trust. They come in first and do their job. They extract standing water. They run industrial dryers for days. They tear out anything that cannot be saved. For mold remediation, they do the containment, the air scrubbing, the antimicrobial treatment. When the structure is dry, clean, and tested, they hand it back to us and we rebuild what they removed.How a Storm Restoration Actually Goes
Most homeowners going through this for the first time think it is a single project. It is actually two projects in sequence, and the order matters.- The roof: We tarp it the day you call if the leak is still active, then schedule the permanent repair or replacement. The interior cannot dry out until the water source is stopped.
- The mitigation crew: Once the roof is buttoned up, our partner mitigation company moves in. Depending on what is wet, they may run dryers for 3 to 7 days, tear out soaked drywall and insulation, and remediate any mold growth. They document everything for the insurance adjuster.
- The rebuild: When the mitigation report clears, we step in. Drywall back up, ceilings retextured to match the rest of the house, baseboards and trim replaced, walls primed and painted, flooring installed. Our goal is that you should not be able to tell anything happened.
Working With Your Insurance
Storm restoration is almost always an insurance claim. We are used to it. We document every dollar of the rebuild scope, write line-item estimates the way adjusters expect them, and we are happy to meet your adjuster on site if that helps the claim move along. What we will not do is inflate the scope, manufacture damage, or play games with your deductible. That is the kind of thing that gets contractors investigated, and we are not interested in that. We give the adjuster an honest number and we stand by the work.Who This Is For
Homeowners who already have a mitigation company on site and need someone to handle the rebuild. Homeowners post-storm who are trying to figure out where to even start and want a contractor to walk them through the sequence. Insurance adjusters who need a reliable rebuild crew that will write a clean estimate and finish on time. If any of that sounds like you, we can help.
Questions
Storm Restoration FAQs
Honest answers about what we do, how the work goes, and how insurance fits in.
We rebuild the interior. Ceilings, drywall, trim, baseboards, paint, and flooring — everything you can see and touch inside the house, that is us. What we do not do is fire, water, or mold mitigation. That is a different trade with different licensing, different equipment, and different liability. Anyone telling you they handle every part of a storm restoration in-house is either subcontracting it without telling you or doing it wrong. We work with licensed mitigation companies we trust. They come in first and do their job — water extraction, industrial dryers, demo, mold containment and remediation. When the structure is dry, clean, and tested, they hand it back to us and we rebuild.
It is two projects in sequence, and the order matters. First the roof: if the leak is still active, we tarp it the day you call, then schedule the permanent repair or replacement. The interior cannot dry out until the water source is stopped. Then the mitigation crew: our partner mitigation company moves in, runs dryers for 3 to 7 days depending on how wet things are, tears out anything that cannot be saved, and remediates any mold. They document everything for the insurance adjuster. Then the rebuild: when the mitigation report clears, we step in. Drywall back up, ceilings retextured to match the rest of the house, baseboards and trim replaced, walls primed and painted, flooring installed. The goal is that you should not be able to tell anything happened.
Storm restoration is almost always an insurance claim, and we are used to it. We document every dollar of the rebuild scope, write line-item estimates the way adjusters expect them, and we are happy to meet your adjuster on site if it helps the claim move along. What we will not do is inflate the scope, manufacture damage, or play games with your deductible. That is the kind of thing that gets contractors investigated, and we are not interested in that. We give the adjuster an honest number and we stand by the work.
After the Storm When the Mitigation Crew Leaves,
When the Mitigation Crew Leaves,
We Pick Up Where They Stopped
A free walk-through of the damage will tell you what the rebuild scope looks like, and we can coordinate with whichever mitigation company is already on site.