Why We Turn Down Work ?

We got a call last month from a family ready to sign. Good land. Good budget. Wanted to start in sixty days.

We said no.

Not because anything was wrong with the project. Because we were full. And "full" for us comes faster than it does for most builders, because we intentionally cap how many projects we run at once.

What Happens When Builders Overcommit

The schedule slips because the framing crew got pulled to another job. The builder doesn't notice a bad measurement because he's on three other sites that day. The weekly update stops coming because there's nothing to update — nobody's been on your site in ten days.

And the family — the one who saved for years, who sold their old house, who's living in a rental waiting for their dream home — feels every bit of it.

How We Work Instead

We cap our active builds so that every home gets full attention from both of us. Hank manages the project, the budget, and the client communication. Harold manages the site, the trades, and the quality.

That means when you call, we pick up. When there's a problem on your site, we catch it the same day. When your weekly update arrives, it has real content.

What It Costs Us

Revenue. We leave money on the table every year. We book out further than most builders. We're at peace with that.

What It Gives You

A builder who knows your name, your project, and your priorities without checking a file. Transparent pricing with no incentive to cut corners. Updates that mean something because the person writing them was standing on your slab that morning.

If you're building the home you'll live in for the next thirty years — the one where your kids will mark their heights on the door frame — it's worth building with people who are fully focused on yours.

Your project might be six months out. It might be a year. Either way, the planning starts now.

Ready to talk about your project?

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