Your Lot. Your Floor Plan. Your Call.
Building a custom home means every decision is yours — layout, ceiling height, the way the light comes in, where the garage sits. We work through all of it with you, and we build it properly. No shortcuts, no cookie-cutter plans forced onto your lot. Just a home that was designed around how you actually live.
What’s Included
Every custom home we build covers the full scope — from the foundation up:
- Site assessment and lot evaluation before design begins
- Full architectural drawings and engineered structural plans
- Finish selections: flooring, tile, cabinetry, countertops, fixtures, and hardware
- Foundation — poured concrete or ICF, sized for Edmonton’s frost depth
- Framing, roofing, and exterior cladding
- Mechanical rough-ins: plumbing, electrical, HVAC, and HRV
- Insulation and air barrier to Alberta Building Code — or above it
- Interior finishing: drywall, trim, paint, doors, and millwork
- Fixed-price contract before construction starts
- Alberta New Home Warranty Program enrollment at possession
Why it matters in Edmonton
Building in Edmonton means building for a climate that doesn’t forgive shortcuts. Frost lines go down nearly two metres, which affects foundation depth and cost. Freeze-thaw cycles put real stress on exterior cladding, flashing, and drainage details. A home that looks fine in photos but wasn’t specced for Alberta winters will show you why within five years.
We also build for lot conditions that vary significantly across Edmonton and surrounding communities. A new lot in Windermere has different soil and drainage conditions than an infill in Glenora or an acreage in Strathcona County. We review all of that before we finalize the design.
Edmonton’s building permit process — through the City or the surrounding municipalities like Leduc, St. Albert, or Spruce Grove — has specific requirements that vary by zone. We handle permits and know what each office expects. It’s not exciting, but getting it wrong delays your build.
Our Process
Consultation & Lot Review
Design, Selections & Contract
Permits & Pre-Build
Construction to Possession
Frequently Asked Questions
No. A lot of clients come to us still evaluating land. We can help you assess whether a lot you’re looking at makes sense for the home you want to build.
It means the price in the contract is the price you pay — outside of any changes you choose to make during the build. We don’t come back later asking for more money because materials went up.
Most builds run 12 to 14 months from contract signing to possession. Simpler designs or faster permit timelines can bring that in; larger or more complex homes take longer.
Minor changes early on are manageable. After framing, changes get expensive quickly. We put a lot of time into the planning phase so changes during construction are the exception, not the rule.