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Selective And Interior Demolition Montgomery County, PA

One Crew Handles What's Seen And Unseen

Selective and interior demolition done right with full environmental licensing for whatever your walls are hiding. We’ve been serving Montgomery County, PA for over 20 years.

What Makes This Different

Federally Licensed For Asbestos

We hold federal EPA asbestos abatement licensing one of the highest bars in the industry, and one most demolition contractors can’t clear.

Twenty-Plus Years In This Market

We’ve been doing this work in Montgomery County and the surrounding tri-county area for over two decades not two years.

Real Estate's Most Referred Crew

Local real estate agents refer us more than any other demolition contractor in the area. Their reputation depends on it so does ours.

Interior Demolition Services Montgomery County, PA

Not Every Wall Should Come Down The Same Way

Selective demolition means taking out exactly what needs to go and leaving everything else intact. Whether you’re opening up a floor plan in a 1950s colonial in Abington, gutting a kitchen down to the studs in Lansdale, or clearing out a commercial suite in King of Prussia for a new tenant, the approach has to match the structure. Knocking things out without a plan creates problems that show up later in inspections, in resale, and sometimes in the walls themselves. Interior demolition covers a wide range of work: removing walls, stripping flooring and ceilings, pulling out MEP systems, and clearing everything down to bare framing when a full gut is what the project calls for. We do all of it, and we do it with a crew that’s been navigating Montgomery County’s older housing stock long enough to know what to expect and what to look for.

What Makes This Different

Your project doesn’t stop cold when something unexpected turns up behind the drywall.
You get one point of contact from pre-demo testing through debris removal no juggling two contractors.
Load-bearing walls are identified before anything is touched, so your structure stays exactly as it should.
Your home outside the work zone stays clean sealed containment and negative air pressure keep dust where it belongs.
Permits are handled through the correct township or borough building department, so your renovation is on record and above board.
When the job is done, the debris is gone haul-away is part of what we do, not an add-on you find out about later.

Older Homes Demolition Contractor Montgomery County, PA

Montgomery County Homes Hide Things We're Ready For

Most of the homes we work in across Montgomery County were built before 1980. That matters more than most homeowners realize. Asbestos was commonly used in insulation, floor tiles, ceiling tiles, and pipe wrap right up until it was phased out. Lead-based paint was standard in anything built before 1978. If your home falls into that range — and a significant portion of housing in Cheltenham, Jenkintown, Norristown, and along the Main Line does — then whoever is doing your demolition needs to be licensed to handle what they find.An unlicensed crew that disturbs asbestos or lead-painted surfaces without proper containment and disposal creates a legal liability for you as the property owner. EPA fines for non-compliant work in pre-1978 homes can reach $37,500 per violation per day. We’re federally licensed for asbestos abatement, EPA RRP certified for lead work, and equipped for mold remediation when moisture has been doing damage behind the walls. When we find something — and in these homes, we often do — the project doesn’t stop. We handle it, document it, and keep moving.

Fast Quotes

Modern Equipment

Clean Finish

Remodel Demolition And Gutting Services PA

We Test Before The First Swing Is Taken

One of the things that separates us from a standard demolition crew is what happens before any work begins. We offer pre-renovation hazard assessments certified sampling and analysis for asbestos, lead, and mold so you know what you’re dealing with before a single wall comes down. It’s not an extra step that slows things down. It’s the step that prevents a project from grinding to a halt halfway through when something unexpected surfaces. From there, the scope is clear. We set up sealed containment with negative air pressure so the rest of your home or building stays clean. We evaluate structural elements load-bearing walls, framing, MEP systems before removing anything. Work is done to code, debris is sorted and removed properly, and when hazardous materials are involved, disposal is documented the way it needs to be. That documentation matters when you go to sell, refinance, or pull future permits.
Our Process

How It Works

A simple process designed to keep everything clear, efficient, and stress-free from start to finish.

Site Assessment And Hazard Testing

We evaluate the structure and test for asbestos, lead, and mold before any demolition begins so nothing catches us off guard mid-project.

Contained, Code-Compliant Demolition

Work areas are sealed with negative air containment. Load-bearing elements are identified first. Everything that needs to come out comes out safely and in the right sequence.

Cleanup, Haul-Away, And Documentation

We remove all debris, provide proper disposal manifests for hazardous materials, and leave the site clean and ready for the next phase of your project.

FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

Get answers to the most common questions about our demolition and interior cutting services.

What is the difference between selective demolition and a full interior gut?
Selective demolition means removing specific elements while leaving the rest of the structure intact think taking out a non-load-bearing wall between two rooms, stripping a bathroom down to the studs, or pulling up flooring without touching anything else. A full interior gut goes further: everything inside the structure comes out down to the bare framing. Both approaches are common in renovation work, and the right choice depends on what your project actually requires. We’ll walk through the scope with you before any work starts so you know exactly what’s coming down and what’s staying.
In most cases, yes especially if the work involves structural elements like walls, or if it disturbs plumbing, electrical, or HVAC systems. Montgomery County doesn’t have a single unified building department; permits are pulled through each individual township or borough. That means a project in Lower Merion Township goes through a different office than one in Horsham Township or Cheltenham Township. After more than 20 years of working in Montgomery County, we know which offices to call, what paperwork is required, and how to keep your project on record so there are no issues when you go to sell or refinance.
For most demolition contractors, finding asbestos or lead mid-project means stopping work and calling someone else. For us, it doesn’t. We’re federally licensed for asbestos abatement and EPA RRP certified for lead work, so we handle it in-house without shutting down your project. We contain the affected area, remove and dispose of the material according to EPA and OSHA standards, document everything with proper disposal manifests, and continue with the demolition. That’s a meaningful difference when you’re on a renovation timeline and can’t afford a two-week hold while another contractor gets scheduled.
It depends on the scope. A targeted selective demo removing one wall, stripping a single bathroom can be done in one to two days. A full interior gut of a larger space can take up to a week or more, depending on the size of the area, what systems need to be disconnected, and whether hazardous materials are involved. We give you a realistic timeline before we start, not an optimistic one we can’t hit. And because we handle environmental issues in-house, a hazardous material discovery doesn’t automatically add weeks to your schedule the way it would with a contractor who has to subcontract that work.
Often, yes depending on the scope and location of the work. If demolition is contained to one area of the home, like a kitchen or a single bathroom, the rest of the house can remain livable. We set up sealed containment with negative air pressure systems, which keeps dust and debris confined to the work zone so the rest of your home isn’t covered in drywall dust. If the scope is larger — a full gut of multiple floors, for example — we’ll give you an honest assessment of whether staying put makes sense for your situation. Safety and air quality always come first.
Residential interior demolition typically runs between $2 and $8 per square foot, with most projects landing somewhere between $1,000 and $5,000 depending on scope, materials involved, and whether hazardous abatement is needed. Commercial projects — tenant improvement work in King of Prussia, for example, or stripping out a medical office suite — are priced based on the specific scope and systems involved. We provide transparent, itemized estimates so you know what you’re paying for before we start. And if you’ve already gotten a written estimate from another contractor, we’ll beat it. Bring it to us and we’ll show you what we can do.