Built to pass inspection. Built to last decades.
Additions, new builds, and structural repairs handled by a contractor who treats code as a floor, not a ceiling.
There is a wide gap between a building that passes inspection and a building that performs for thirty years. The difference is rarely in the materials. It's in the parts you can't see — flashing details, fastener schedules, moisture control, structural connections. SBC Construction builds for the second decade, not the first photo.
What professional work looks like.
Plenty of contractors deliver what looks like a finished project. Here's what separates work that holds up from work that fails quietly.
- Engineered plans drawn for your specific site and soil
- Footings sized for actual load, not the minimum a code chart allows
- Flashing details installed before siding so water moves outward, not inward
- Fastener type and spacing matched to manufacturer spec
- Structural connections (hurricane ties, ridge straps) installed where called for
- Real shop drawings and submittals on anything that needs them
- Stock plans dropped on a site they don't fit
- Minimum footings everywhere regardless of load
- Caulk substituted for flashing
- Wrong fastener for the material (galvanic corrosion, pull-out)
- Skipping connections 'because it's never failed before'
- Verbal change orders that aren't on paper anywhere
How the project actually runs.
- 01Site walk and program
We listen to what you actually want the building to do, then look at the site for constraints.
- 02Plans and engineering
Real drawings, real engineering where required, real permit-ready documents.
- 03Written contract and schedule
Fixed scope, fixed price where possible, written timeline with milestones.
- 04Build with documentation
Photos and notes at every inspection point, change orders in writing.
- 05Punch list and handoff
We work the punch list to zero before we ask for final payment.
General Construction by city.
Localized pages with drive time, climate considerations, and what we typically run into in each market.
What clients ask before they hire us.
Ready to talk about your general construction project?
Free assessment. Real numbers. No high-pressure sales.