FAQs
- What types of customers have you worked with?
We make sense out of confusing and unusable yards and bring curb appeal to homes that simply don't have any (yet)
- What advice would you give a customer looking to hire a provider in your area of work?
Many contractors represent the manufacturers brochures as an expectation to a finished project. Hiring contractors based on numbers written on a piece of paper, backed by the flyers of manufacturers' work is building in risk to a home improvement project. Being handed a Cambridge paver brochure as an expectation of patio to be built is only good if Cambridge builds your patio (as well as sells the pavers).A legitimate contractor should be able to produce "some" evidence at the very least that they are capable of quality work based on their own portfolio of projects they can legitimately claim as theirs.
- What questions should customers think through before talking to professionals about their project?
Many home improvement projects maintain a degree of permanence. Selecting a contractor to complete a project based on attractive prices alone can prove to be a shaky investment. A project purchased at 3/4 the cost of the going rate can be 1/4 of money saved at any given time but 100% of your total allotted money wasted. Many of the projects cannot be easily repaired and brought up to speed with the difference in money that could have went to the right contractor.