What You're Dealing With
After mitigation is complete, the visible damage still needs to be fixed — properly, efficiently, and to the standard your property demands:
Multiple trades need to be coordinated — drywall, flooring, painting, carpentry, electrical, plumbing
Piecemeal repairs from multiple contractors creates delays, inconsistency, and accountability gaps
Insurance documentation must align with scope completed for claims to close correctly
In-suite and common area work must be sequenced to minimize disruption to occupants
Our Process
1
Scope Assessment & Planning
Full walkthrough of all affected areas. Restoration scope documented in detail and aligned with insurance claim requirements from the start.
2
Structural & Systems Repairs
Drywall, ceilings, doors, frames, and any electrical or plumbing work related to the loss — completed before finishes are applied.
3
Flooring & Interior Finishes
Carpet, vinyl, laminate, hardwood, and tile repair or replacement. Baseboards, trim, cabinetry, and finish carpentry restored to pre-loss condition.
4
Painting & Odour Sealing
Primer, stain-blocking applications, and final paint — interior and exterior where required. Odour sealants applied before finishing in fire and water-affected spaces.
5
Final Clean & Turnover
Space cleaned to turnover-ready standard. Final walkthrough completed and sign-off documentation provided for insurance and property records.
Full Scope of Work
Structural & Systems
Drywall repair, boarding, taping, and finishing
Ceiling repairs — drywall and suspended systems
Door and frame repair or replacement
Electrical repairs related to the loss
Plumbing repairs related to the loss
Moisture-resistant material upgrades where applicable
Finishes & Interiors
Flooring — carpet, vinyl, laminate, hardwood, tile
Baseboards, trim, and finish carpentry
Cabinetry — kitchens, vanities, and millwork
Interior and exterior painting with primer and stain-block
Common area restoration — hallways, lobbies, amenity spaces
In-suite repairs coordinated with occupants and management
Turnkey Project Management
What turnkey means
Single contractor manages mitigation through full rebuild — no handoff gaps
One point of contact for property managers and insurance adjusters throughout
Scope, timeline, and costs documented and aligned with the insurance claim from day one
What you get at the end
Space restored to pre-loss condition, turnover-ready
Final photo documentation and completion report for insurance
Moisture-resistant upgrades applied where applicable to reduce future risk