Full Home Remodeling in Edmonton

A full home remodel isn’t just a renovation, it’s a structural project.

Opening up a main floor means removing load-bearing walls, and making sure the structure above is fully supported. Rerouting mechanical, electrical, and HVAC around a new layout is technical work that has to be done correctly. This is what a full remodel involves, and it’s where Kingdom Signature Developments has built a sparkling reputation in Edmonton.

We’re regularly brought in by other contractors specifically to handle the structural side of complex remodels. That speaks to the level of trust the industry places in us. For homeowners, it means working with a team that has the experience to confidently execute structural work.

Structural Expertise at the Core of Every Full Remodel

The most common reason home remodels go over budget or over schedule is because the structural layout wasn’t properly planned. Kingdom plans the structural work first, as it governs everything else.

Our process begins with a detailed structural assessment of your home.

We look at:

Before we talk about layouts or finishes, we need to understand the structure.

When load-bearing walls are being removed, we ensure the structure above is fully supported while the permanent solution is installed. We bring in licensed structural engineers and, where appropriate, third-party inspectors to verify the work at key stages. This isn’t a box-checking exercise, it’s how we ensure the structural changes in your home are documented, and built correctly.

Alongside the framing work, full remodels require careful rerouting of electrical, HVAC ducting, and plumbing. When walls come down and layouts change, every system that runs through those walls needs a new path. We plan to work in coordination with the structural sequence. The sequence matters and getting it right keeps the project on time and on budget.

Before anything moves forward, we have an honest conversation about what your project will actually cost. Structural work has a wide range depending on what’s in your walls, and what you’re trying to achieve.

Layout Design That Starts with the Structure

The structure directly shapes the layout possibilities in a full remodel.

Our team evaluates load paths through your home and identifies which walls are structural and which are partitioned. That assessment tells us where the design has real flexibility and where it doesn’t. That honesty early in the process saves significant time and money later.

From there, we design a layout that takes full advantage of what the structure allows.

Every layout decision gets made with the mechanical systems in mind as well. Relocating a kitchen affects duct runs, drain lines, and electrical panel loads. Changing a stairwell location affects how structural loads travel through the floor system. These connections are what distinguishes a properly planned remodel from one that reveals problems as the build progresses.

No layout decision gets made separately from the structural and mechanical reality of your home.

Technical Decisions Explained Clearly

Structural and mechanical decisions in a full remodel are technical. Most homeowners haven’t thought about load transfer, beam sizing, or duct rerouting before. Our job is to translate those decisions into terms you can actually evaluate.

When we’re reviewing underlying build options with you, we explain what each means visually, structurally, and in terms of cost. You’ll understand the trade-offs before you make a call.

You’ll never be asked to sign off on a structural decision you don’t fully understand.

The budget stays on the table through every conversation. Structural options, mechanical solutions, and finish choices all get weighed against what you’re working with.

How We Manage the Technical Complexity

A full home remodel requires a build sequence that accounts for structural work, mechanical rerouting, and trade coordination. Our process is built around that because when it’s wrong, the whole project slows down.

Our process starts with a discovery call and follows up with a full in-home assessment. We look at your existing structure, map the bearing walls, and identify where building systems run. We’re careful to flag anything that will affect the scope. That assessment shapes the entire project plan.

We give you an honest initial budget range based on what the framing and mechanical work will involve. Structural scope has real cost implications, and you should know where your project sits before committing a direction.

Once scope and budget are aligned, we develop the full project plan. Engineering drawings, structural specifications, mechanical rerouting plans, permit applications, and a build sequence that maps each phase in order. Construction doesn’t start until that plan is complete.

Every phase of the building process has a defined entry point and exit condition. Trades are sequenced so no one is waiting on someone else to finish before they can start.

During construction, a dedicated site supervisor manages the day-to-day. Coordinating the trade sequence, overseeing structural stages, arranging third-party inspections, and keeping the project moving on schedule.

Technical Decisions Explained Clearly

This sequence is what keeps a core framing complex project on time and on budget. Every phase is planned prior to the start. The structural work is signed off before mechanical begins, which is then followed by rough-ins. There are no improvised decisions mid-build.

Always Know Where the Build Stands

A full home remodel moves through distinct technical phases, and it matters that you understand each one. We keep you informed with the specificity this kind of project deserves.

We use JobTread to centralize all project communication, schedules, site photos, inspection reports, approvals, and milestone updates. You can see exactly which phase is active, what was completed that day, and what’s coming next.

When a structural stage is complete, you’ll see it documented with photos and notes before the next phase begins. When an inspection happens, you’ll know the outcome. No radio silence on the things that matter most.

When you have questions or concerns you’ll reach the same person every time, someone who understands your project.

Structural Integrity Built Into Every Stage

The quality of a full home remodel is only as strong as the framing work underneath it.

We work with licensed structural engineers. The engineers size beams correctly for the loads they carry, specify connection details, and produce stamped drawings where required. That documentation protects you, satisfies the building department, and ensures the work is done to a defensible standard.

Third-party inspections are brought in at structural stages where an independent set of eyes adds value. Framing, mechanical rough-ins, and electrical are all reviewed before drywall closes. The work that disappears behind walls gets the same scrutiny as the work you’ll see every day.

All structural and mechanical work follows Alberta Building Code. Permits are pulled, inspections are scheduled, and documentation is kept. A home that’s been significantly remodeled without proper permits creates real problems for future lenders and buyers. We make sure that’s never an issue.

Our site supervisor is present throughout every phase. Consistent oversight isn’t optional; it’s what keeps every system in the home working together correctly.

At handover, we walk every room with you. We also review the mechanical systems — HVAC, electrical, plumbing — so you understand what was done and how your home now functions. If anything isn’t right, it gets addressed before the project closes.

Warranty That Covers the Work That Matters Most

A full home remodel involves structural changes that will be part of your home for decades. Our warranty reflects the confidence we have in how that work was done.

Every full home remodel comes with a one-year warranty on workmanship, materials, and installation. Structural work carries a five-year warranty. Given that framing changes are the core of most full remodels, that coverage matters.

At completion, we hand over a documentation package that covers what was built, what was engineered, what was inspected, and how the mechanical systems were modified. You’ll have a clear record of the structural changes made to your home.

After handover, we stay reachable. A project this size will generate questions over time — about systems, about structure, about what was done and why. You’ll have someone to call who knows every detail.

Ready to Talk About What’s Possible?

A full home remodel is a structural project first. The finishes matter, but the bones of the work — the beams, the load paths, the mechanical rerouting, the way the structure was handled when walls came down — are what determines whether it was done right.

Kingdom has the structural experience, the engineering relationships, and the process to manage this work properly. If you’re planning a full home remodel in Edmonton and you want a team that understands what’s actually involved, reach out.

We’ll give you an honest assessment of your home, a realistic picture of what the underlying work will involve, and a clear sense of what the project will cost. No pressure, no guesswork.