Interior Renovations · Verona, NJ
Interior Renovations in Verona, NJ
Interior Renovations for homeowners in Verona, NJ. Careful planning, plain answers, and one contractor coordinating the work, from Home Concepts Construction.
Our approach
Interior work that makes the whole house feel pulled together
A lot of the houses we work on have been updated piece by piece over decades — one room repainted in 2008, new flooring in the kitchen in 2015, a bathroom redone last year. The end result is a house that doesn’t quite hang together visually. The fix isn’t a massive renovation — it’s coordinated interior work.
We look at the rooms together, figure out what’s consistent and what isn’t, and plan paint, trim, flooring, lighting, and doors as one scope. That’s much cheaper than doing each room as a separate project, and the finished result actually feels intentional.
We also sequence the work so trades don’t step on each other — flooring goes in after paint, lighting before trim, and so on. That’s the kind of detail that prevents rework and finish damage.
What this includes
- Paint, trim, and millwork across multiple rooms
- Flooring installation and clean transitions between rooms
- Lighting upgrades and fixture replacement
Local context
Interior Renovations in the Verona market
Most of the homes we work on in Verona are older colonials and capes from the first half of the 20th century, with solid construction but layouts that were designed for a different way of living. We spend a lot of time up front figuring out how to open things up without fighting the structure.
A lot of the homes here were built in the 1920s and 1930s, when kitchens were small service rooms tucked away from the rest of the house. The dining room got all the square footage, and the kitchen got a corner. That doesn't work for how families actually use their homes today, so the most common project we plan in Verona is opening the kitchen to the rest of the first floor. That usually means dealing with a load-bearing wall — a wall that's actually holding up the second story. It's not a showstopper, but it does mean we need to add a beam overhead to carry that weight. We size that beam and plan the support columns before we start demo, so it doesn't turn into a surprise halfway through the project.
The other thing we see often in homes like these is that the upstairs has one bathroom serving the whole family, and it's small. A lot of homeowners want to add a second bath or expand the existing one, and that's where the planning gets specific. The waste line is already running down through the walls to the basement, so if we're adding a new bathroom, we need to think about where that drain is going and whether the existing stack can handle it. Same with the water heater — older homes often have a 40-gallon unit that was fine for one bathroom but gets stretched thin with two. These are things we talk through before we finalize scope, not after we've already opened the walls.
What tends to matter in Verona
- Many of the older homes here have plaster walls over wood lath, which can hide outdated wiring — we always check what's behind the walls before we plan any demo or electrical upgrades.
- A lot of these homes still have their original cast iron waste lines in the basement, which can be partially clogged after decades of use — something we look at early if we're adding plumbing fixtures.
- Older colonials in this area often have narrow staircases and doorways, which means we plan material deliveries and staging carefully so we're not trying to muscle a bathtub around a tight corner.
- Homes built before 1950 here usually have undersized electrical panels that need upgrading if the homeowner is adding modern appliances or a finished basement with proper lighting and outlets.
FAQ
Interior Renovations in Verona — common questions
What kinds of work fall under interior renovations?
Usually some mix of paint, trim, flooring, lighting, doors, and fixture updates. We help you figure out which ones will actually move the needle for your house and which ones can wait.
Can you do several rooms at once?
Yes — and that’s actually where this kind of project makes the most sense. Doing multiple rooms together means consistent finishes, a single mobilization, and less disruption than spreading the work out over years.
How long does this kind of work usually take?
Depends on scope, but interior work typically moves faster than a kitchen or bathroom remodel because we’re not opening walls or moving plumbing. We’ll give you a realistic timeline before we start.
How long does a typical kitchen remodel take in an older home?
Most kitchen projects in homes like these run 8 to 12 weeks from demo to final walkthrough. That includes time for any structural work if we're opening up a wall, plus the usual lead times for cabinets and countertops. If we find something unexpected behind the walls — old wiring that needs updating, a waste line that's partially clogged — we build a little buffer into the schedule so it doesn't push the whole project back.
What happens if you find knob-and-tube wiring when you open the walls?
It's pretty common in homes from the 1920s and 1930s. If we find it, we don't just cover it back up — we work with the homeowner to replace it with modern wiring in the areas we're remodeling. Sometimes that means opening a few extra walls to make sure everything is safe and up to code, but we walk through that before we proceed so there are no surprises on the bill.
Can we stay in the house during a bathroom remodel if it's our only bathroom?
Yes, but it takes some planning. We usually set up a temporary utility sink and make sure the toilet is functional at the end of each day, even if the rest of the room is torn apart. It's not glamorous, but it keeps the family in the house. If we're doing a full gut, some families choose to stay with relatives for a week or two during the rough-in phase, but that's up to the homeowner.
Do we need permits for a kitchen or bathroom remodel in Verona?
Yes, for anything that involves moving plumbing, adding electrical circuits, or structural changes. We handle the permit applications and coordinate inspections as part of the project. The process in Essex County is pretty straightforward, and building inspectors here generally know what to look for in older homes.
How much does it cost to open up a load-bearing wall between the kitchen and dining room?
It depends on the span and what's above it, but adding the beam and support usually runs a few thousand dollars on top of the rest of the kitchen work. We price that out during the planning phase so it's part of the overall budget from the start, not something that gets tacked on later.
What's the biggest thing homeowners don't think about before starting a remodel?
Material lead times. Cabinets can take 8 to 12 weeks, custom tile another few weeks, and if you're ordering a specific fixture or countertop material, it's not sitting in a warehouse waiting for you. We build that into the schedule up front so the project doesn't stall halfway through waiting for a backsplash.
How do you handle dust and debris with kids or pets in the house?
We seal off the work area with plastic barriers and run air scrubbers to keep dust from traveling through the rest of the house. At the end of each day, we clean up the workspace so it's not a hazard. It's never completely dust-free, but we do everything we can to keep the mess contained to one area.
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Interior Renovations in Verona — get a free quote
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Licensed & Insured · New Jersey Home Improvement Contractor