Concord pairs one of the region's prettiest historic downtowns — Union Street's Victorians and four-squares with their original millwork — with some of its largest '90s–2000s family neighborhoods, like Highland Creek and Moss Creek. We remodel on both ends, and the common thread is kitchens that were never planned around the person doing the cooking.
In the historic blocks we work with the house: preserving casework worth keeping, upgrading knob-and-tube-era systems, and fitting modern function into rooms with real character. In the family neighborhoods it's the classic fix list — recirculating hoods swapped for ducted ventilation, doors converted to drawers, islands resized so the aisles work, and hall baths rebuilt with waterproofing the original schedule skipped.
Local logistics: Concord runs its own permitting through the City of Concord; Cabarrus County handles some unincorporated pockets nearby.
A 1990s lakefront kitchen with a peninsula that choked traffic, rebuilt around a 10-foot island with prep sink, a 1,200 CFM vented hood, and a full wall of drawer storage.
A cramped galley in a 1920s Davidson farmhouse opened into the dining room, with inset cabinetry that matches the home's original trim and a modern work core hidden inside.
A builder-grade Huntersville kitchen from 2004 taken down to the studs: island relocated to fix the work triangle, coffee station moved out of the cook's path, and lighting done in three layers.