Plumbing for Remodels and Home Additions

Project-based plumbing for bathroom remodels, kitchen renovations, and home additions across Connecticut and Westchester County, NY. We coordinate with your contractor and handle everything from rough-in to final trim.

The Challenge with Renovation Plumbing

Renovation plumbing requires more than just swapping fixtures. The rough-in work has to be done at the right stage, sequenced around other trades, and pass inspection before walls close. Getting that coordination wrong causes delays that ripple through the entire project.

What We Handle

From single-room renovations to full additions, here is the scope of work we take on.

Bathroom Remodels

Supply and drain rough-in, fixture moves, new vanities, toilets, showers, and tubs. We handle full gut remodels and smaller fixture swaps.

Home Additions

Extending supply and drain lines into new square footage, adding new bathrooms or wet bars, and tying new work into the existing vent system.

Kitchen Plumbing

Sink supply and drain lines, dishwasher connections, refrigerator water lines, pot fillers, and any layout changes that come with a kitchen redesign.

Also need a basement bathroom? See our basement bathroom service.

How a Remodel Project Works

What to expect from first contact through final inspection

1

Scope Review

We review your plans, walk the space, and identify what plumbing work the project requires and when it needs to happen.

2

Permit Coordination

We apply for any required plumbing permits and communicate with the local building department on your behalf.

3

Existing System Assessment

Before rough-in, we assess your current supply, drain, waste, and vent configuration to plan the integration points.

4

Rough-In Plumbing

We install new supply lines, drain lines, and vent stacks in the wall and floor framing before it is closed in. This phase requires an inspection.

5

Trade Coordination

We work alongside your GC, tile setter, and other trades to ensure plumbing work does not hold up the schedule.

6

Fixture Installation and Trim

Once finishes are in place, we return to connect and install fixtures, valves, and any final plumbing connections.

What's Included

Everything we handle as part of your remodel or addition project

Rough-in supply and drain lines
Vent stack work
Permit application and coordination
Inspection scheduling
Fixture installation
Valve and shutoff installation
Coordination with general contractor
Final walkthrough and testing

Recent Remodel Work

Kitchen plumbing rough-in for a full kitchen remodel
Updated kitchen sink and supply lines after remodel
New bathroom fixtures installed during a bathroom remodel
Modern bathroom vanity plumbing connections
Supply line rough-in during a home addition project
Drain and vent work for a bathroom addition

Remodel Plumbing FAQs

Common questions about renovation and addition plumbing

As early as possible. Ideally, you want a plumber involved during the planning phase so rough-in requirements are factored into the framing and layout decisions. Last-minute plumbing changes after framing is done are common and avoidable with early coordination.
Rough-in is the phase where supply lines, drain lines, and vent pipes are installed inside the wall and floor framing before drywall goes up. Inspectors need to see this work before it is concealed. Skipping or failing inspection means opening walls later, which is expensive.
Yes. We are used to working as part of a larger project team. We communicate directly with your GC on scheduling, sequencing, and any issues that come up. We show up when we say we will and do not hold up other trades.
Yes. Additions often require extending supply and drain lines from the main house, adding new fixtures, and tying into the existing vent system. We assess the existing setup first to make sure the addition is properly integrated.
It depends on the scope. A bathroom remodel rough-in typically takes one to two days. Fixture installation and trim takes another half day to a full day once finishes are in. Additions vary based on how much new plumbing is involved. We give you a realistic timeline estimate before the project starts.
Older homes often have plumbing that does not meet current code, which can surface during a remodel inspection. We document what we find and discuss options with you before doing any additional work. We do not perform unapproved work or pad scope without your approval.
Yes. Kitchen plumbing typically involves sink supply and drain lines, dishwasher connections, and sometimes refrigerator or pot-filler lines. Bathroom remodels cover toilets, vanities, showers, tubs, and all associated supply and drain work.
In most cases, yes. Moving drain lines requires opening the floor or slab and is more involved than moving supply lines. We assess whether the new layout is feasible given your existing system and let you know if there are any significant constraints before work begins.

Service Areas

We provide remodel & addition plumbing services throughout Connecticut and New York

Planning a Remodel or Addition?

Get in touch to discuss your project scope and timeline. We respond within 24 hours.