
Full bathroom rebuilds, tub-to-shower conversions, accessibility upgrades, master bath additions, powder room creation.
Sink relocations, new dishwasher and fridge water lines, pot fillers, gas line for new ranges, RO system installs.
New bathrooms, in-law suites, mudroom sinks, second-floor laundry rooms — full plumbing rough-in for new construction.
Adding a bathroom, wet bar, laundry, or utility sink to a finished basement. Includes sewage ejector pump installs when needed.
Re-piping galvanized supply lines, replacing cast-iron drain stacks, modernizing fixtures across the house.
Between-tenant renovations, fixture standardization, multi-unit projects with one point of contact.
You either have a general contractor running your remodel, or you’re managing trades yourself. Either way, we work with all the people who touch a remodel:
We coordinate scope, schedule, and inspection timing. We show up when the project needs us — rough-in, mid-project, or final install.
We rough-in plumbing before drywall, then come back for final fixture install after tile is done. Sequencing matters — we know how to time it.
We coordinate sink and faucet install with cabinet delivery. Most kitchens need plumbing in twice — once for rough-in, once for final after counters.
Dishwashers, garbage disposals, water heaters, gas ranges — we plan the plumbing around the electrical and appliance schedule.
Found behind walls in many homes built before the 1970s. Corroded, restricted flow, near end-of-life. Better to replace while the wall is open — and we'll tell you exactly when that's the right call.
The big vertical drain pipe running through your house. Common in homes 50+ years old. Sometimes still good, sometimes ready to fail. We assess and recommend honestly — replacement isn't always needed.
Adding a second bathroom or a new appliance to a remodel? The existing supply lines might not handle the new demand. We size it correctly before demo, not after.
We camera-inspect before remodels involving bathroom additions or basement bathrooms. Tree roots, cracks, or bellies in the main sewer line need to be fixed first — finding out later costs 10x more.
Older homes often have improper or undersized drain vents. We bring everything up to current code during a remodel — important for inspection sign-off.
Adding a bathroom below sewer line grade requires a sewage ejector pump. Not catching this early means major rework. We plan for it.
Yes. Many Union County homeowners manage remodels themselves and hire trades directly. We work that way often — we schedule with your other trades, communicate with you on scope, and we can recommend other tradespeople if you need them.
Usually yes — moving a sink, toilet, or shower a few feet is straightforward. Moving them across the room or to a different floor gets more complex. We do site walks before designs are finalized so you know what's realistic without burning design time.
You're right to think about it — but it's better to know during a planned remodel than to discover it during an emergency. We inspect what's exposed during demo, tell you what's a real problem vs. what's cosmetic, and prioritize repairs by urgency, not by sales pitch.
We work with property managers all the time on multi-unit upgrades — standardizing fixtures, coordinating between-tenant turnovers, and giving you clear, documented work for your records.
40+ years on Union County remodels. We know what's behind these walls.
GCs, designers, tile, cabinet, electrical, appliance delivery. We coordinate, we don't compete.
NJ Master Plumber License #9142. Permits pulled, inspections passed, warranty stays valid.
Our plumbing is warrantied. If something we installed fails, we come back at no charge.
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Depends on scope. A bathroom remodel plumbing is typically 2–4 days spread across rough-in and final install. A kitchen is similar. A full addition with new bathroom is 3–7 days of plumbing work spread over weeks.
We tell you immediately — what we found, what it means, what your options are, and what additional cost or time it'll add. No "decisions made for you" — you decide whether to fix it now while the wall is open or pass on it.