Updating the Apple Capital's Homes
A lot of La Crescent's best housing was built between the 1950s and the 1980s — solid split-levels and ranches on the hillside with layouts that haven't aged as well as their bones. Closed-off kitchens, one bath where a family needs two, unfinished walkout basements with the best view in the house. That's exactly the kind of work we've been doing since 1987.
Our La Crescent remodels lean heavily toward opening things up: taking down the wall between a galley kitchen and the living room, converting walkout lower levels into family rooms and guest suites that face the valley, and turning tired bathrooms into ones that feel like they belong in this decade. We also update the older village-core homes near downtown, where good plaster-era construction deserves better than a cheap flip treatment.
You get a written, itemized scope and price before we start, dust containment and daily cleanup while we work, and Josh or Justin personally running the job. Most projects come to us from referrals — in a town this size, that only happens when the last job went well.