Home Additions in Beverly Hills, MI.
Ground-level additions and primary suites on the village’s comfortable lots, plus the occasional second-story build-up.
Home Additions in Beverly Hills
Beverly Hills is a village of mid-century ranches and colonials on well-kept lots, with preservation-minded owners who tend to improve rather than replace. Most renovation here is thoughtful updating of solid 1950s–70s homes.
Typical range: $200 – $450 / sq ft · Timeline: 4–8 months. Every project is a fixed-price contract with permits pulled and inspections scheduled by us.
What we handle
Scope
- Build-out (ground level)
- Build-up (second story)
- Primary suite additions
- Sunrooms and four-season rooms
- Garage and mudroom additions
Permits in Beverly Hills
- The Village of Beverly Hills issues residential permits through its building department. We pull every permit and meet inspectors on site.
Every project includes
- Fixed-price written contract
- Permits pulled by us
- Daily site cleanup, weekly updates
- One-year workmanship warranty
Home Additions in Beverly Hills: questions.
How much should a home addition cost in Beverly Hills, MI?
Ground-level additions in Oakland County run $200 to $350 per square foot; second-story and primary-suite additions run $300 to $450 per square foot including structural engineering. Sunrooms and screened additions are lower at $150 to $250 per square foot depending on how they are conditioned.
How long does a home addition take in Beverly Hills?
A ground-level room addition runs 4 to 6 months from permit to completion; second-story additions and primary suites run 5 to 8 months. Permitting at Oakland County municipalities adds two to six weeks before we break ground.
Do you pull permits for home additions in Beverly Hills?
Yes, on every job. The Village of Beverly Hills issues residential permits through its building department. We pull every permit and meet inspectors on site.
What is the difference between a build-out and a build-up addition?
A build-out expands the ground-floor footprint into the yard; a build-up adds a second story or expands an upper level. Build-outs are generally less expensive per square foot because the foundation work is simpler. Build-ups require engineering the existing structure to carry the added load but leave the yard intact — the right call on tight lots.