Construction & Remodeling Services in Mill Valley

We design and build Mill Valley renovations under one roof.

Mill Valley is redwood-canopy hillside living — steep lots, indoor-outdoor plans, and homes set into the trees. The work is structural as much as it is design — framing, systems, and a permit set that clears the City of Mill Valley review the first time. One team, one fixed proposal, from the first feasibility sketch to the final inspection sign-off.

Home within the redwood canopy in Mill Valley

About Our Work in Mill Valley

Mill Valley’s homes reward careful work. Hillside cuts, redwood-canopy site planning, and midcentury homes that want more light and a better connection to the outside. We’ve spent years working inside conditions like these: filing with the City of Mill Valley, coordinating structural and Title 24 compliance, and sequencing trades so a family can stay in the house where it’s possible. Design and build live under one roof, which is the only way the drawings and the budget stay honest with each other.

Neighborhoods We Serve

We build across Mill Valley — from the canyon up the hillsides.

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Professionals Tips

Budget a real contingency on older homes

Older houses reveal hidden conditions once the walls open — dated wiring, dry rot, sometimes asbestos in old tile or insulation. We plan a 10–15% contingency on pre-1978 stock from the start, because the house always has an opinion once you’re inside it.

Permit timelines depend on scope and review

A simple interior remodel moves faster than a layout change with new systems. Hillside and tree review in Mill Valley adds time to the permit path. We file the set with the City of Mill Valley to clear the first time.

Open the wall before you price the wall

On an older house, what’s behind the plaster sets the number. Because we design and build under one roof, the structural reality — a bearing wall, a tired foundation, a relocated soil stack — gets priced into the fixed proposal instead of arriving later as a change order.

The specification is the design

Rift-sawn white oak, honed quartzite, unlacquered brass, Heath tile — we name and detail the materials and junctions before demolition, so the trades build to a drawing rather than a guess. Restraint reads as luxury; vagueness reads as risk.

Build Title 24 in at the drawing stage

Any California remodel that touches lighting, windows, or HVAC has to meet Title 24, and inspectors check at final. We plan the LED layout, fenestration, and mechanical for compliance up front, so a finished room never fails its last inspection.

Plan the project as a sequence

A full-scope renovation is roughly several weeks of design, a permitting window, and a few months of construction. Knowing the order — feasibility, fixed proposal, permits, then build with weekly site reports — is what keeps a project from stalling between trades.

Real Projects. Real Results.

Explore examples of completed remodeling and construction projects across San Francisco. View before-and-after transformations and see how thoughtful planning and execution make a difference.

Why Homeowners Choose Us in Mill Valley

FAQ

Almost always. Anything structural, electrical, plumbing, or that changes a layout needs a permit from the City of Mill Valley. Simple interior remodels move faster; layout and systems changes take longer in plan review. We file the set and carry it through final inspection.

Plan on several months door to door for full-scope work — a design phase, a permitting window, and a construction phase. Single-room remodels are shorter. You get the real sequence in feasibility, not a guess.

Often, for single-room or phased projects — we seal the work zone, protect the path, and keep a kitchen and bath functional where we can. Full-home or structural work is usually safer and faster with the house empty. We tell you honestly which one your project is before we start.

It depends on scope — a finishes-forward remodel, a full layout change, and structural work are different numbers. The full-scope, design-build work we take on reflects layout changes, structural work, and custom millwork. Your fixed number comes out of feasibility, not a webpage.

Yes — that’s the point of design-build. Architecture, engineering, permits, and construction sit under one contract and one schedule, so the drawings and the budget stay honest with each other and nothing falls through the gap between a designer and a separate contractor.

Older houses hide dated wiring, tired foundations, dry rot, and sometimes asbestos in old materials. We plan a 10–15% contingency on pre-1978 stock and open exploratory areas early, so the surprises are priced in feasibility rather than billed as change orders.

Yes — from the canyon up the hillsides. Permit paths differ by area: historic or hillside review adds time. Our studio is on Union Street in San Francisco, and we build across the Bay Area.

We start with a feasibility conversation and a site walk, then put a fixed proposal in writing — not a vague range. You’ll know what the design fees, permits, materials, labor, and contingency cover before any demolition begins.

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