Hear from Our Customers
Here’s what usually happens when a homeowner in Horsham hires a standard demo crew to gut a kitchen or tear out a bathroom: things go fine until they don’t. A floor tile comes up wrong. Something in the wall doesn’t look right. The crew stops, says they can’t touch it, and now you’re on the phone trying to find a certified abatement contractor while your project sits open and your timeline falls apart. That’s a predictable scenario in a township where the bulk of the housing stock was built between the 1950s and 1970s.
When you work with us, that chain of events doesn’t happen. Testing, abatement, and demolition are all handled in-house. If something turns up mid-job — asbestos in the floor tiles, lead paint behind the drywall, whatever it is — we deal with it and keep going. The project doesn’t stop. Your schedule doesn’t blow up.
Horsham’s history with environmental contamination isn’t abstract to the people who live here. You’ve watched what happens when hazardous materials get mishandled. Working with a contractor who holds a PA state license for asbestos removal and carries a Certified Lead Inspector and Risk Assessor credential isn’t being overly cautious — it’s the right call.
We’ve been doing this work in Horsham and Montgomery County for over twenty years. Not just demolition — the full scope. Testing, hazmat abatement, interior gut-outs, structural demo, and waterproofing. All of it, under one roof, with one crew that knows what they’re doing.
The credentials aren’t decorative. We hold a Pennsylvania state license for asbestos removal under Acts 194 and 161, carry a Certified Lead Inspector and Risk Assessor designation, and operate in full compliance with EPA and HUD standards. Fully licensed, bonded, and insured — all three. In a market where a lot of contractors claim to handle hazmat work without the paperwork to back it up, that distinction matters.
Horsham is a core part of our service area — from the historic neighborhoods near Horsham Road and Route 611 to the post-war subdivisions throughout the township’s interior. If you’re in Horsham Township, you’re not calling someone who has to look you up on a map.
It starts with a free estimate. You describe the scope — a kitchen gut, a bathroom tear-out, a full interior demo, whatever it is — and we come out, look at the space, and give you a clear number. No vague ranges, no bait-and-switch. If you’ve already got a quote from someone else, bring it. The beat-any-estimate guarantee is real.
Before any demo work begins, the space gets evaluated for hazardous materials. In Horsham, where most of the residential housing stock was built before 1978, this step isn’t optional — it’s required under Pennsylvania and federal law. Asbestos-containing materials must be identified and removed by a licensed contractor before demolition disturbs them. We handle that in-house, so there’s no waiting on a separate abatement company to come and go before work can start.
Once the site is clear, the demolition work proceeds under licensed, on-site supervision using HEPA filtration systems and equipment that keeps the rest of your home protected during the process. Horsham Township requires building permits for structural demolition work — wall removal, partition changes, anything that touches the structure — and we navigate that compliance as a standard part of every project. When the job is done, the site is clean, documented, and ready for whatever comes next.
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We handle the full range of residential and commercial demolition work — interior gut-outs, kitchen and bathroom demo, basement clearing, wall and partition removal, structural teardowns, and whole-house gutting before a full renovation build-back. For general contractors and project managers working in Horsham’s active renovation market, we’re a reliable sub for the gut phase before your crew comes in to build.
What sets our service apart in this market is the environmental layer that comes standard. Given the age of Horsham’s housing stock — much of it built during the peak era of asbestos and lead paint use — every project gets a proper pre-demo evaluation. If regulated materials are present, they’re abated by our own certified crew before demolition proceeds. That’s not an add-on. It’s part of how the job gets done correctly under Pennsylvania DEP and EPA NESHAP requirements.
We also handle waterproofing when the project calls for it, which is relevant for Horsham homeowners dealing with older foundation systems and the moisture intrusion issues that come with them. Emergency response is available around the clock — if a mold discovery, post-flood gut-out, or unexpected structural issue comes up on a Tuesday night, we pick up the phone. Cash discounts are available for qualifying projects, and the free estimate gets you a real number before you commit to anything.
Yes — Horsham Township requires building permits for any work that involves structural changes, including interior demolition that touches walls, partitions, door openings, or load-bearing elements. Simple cosmetic work like removing drywall finishes or wallpaper doesn’t trigger a permit requirement, but the moment you’re taking down walls or altering the structure in any meaningful way, you need to pull a permit from Horsham Township’s Building Department before work begins.
This is one of those things that unlicensed or less experienced contractors sometimes skip, and it creates real problems for homeowners — especially at resale, when unpermitted work can surface during a home inspection and become a negotiating liability. We operate with full permit compliance as a standard part of every project. You don’t have to chase that down yourself or wonder if it was handled. It’s part of the process from the start.
If asbestos-containing materials are identified during a pre-demo evaluation or discovered mid-project, work on that area has to stop until the materials are properly abated by a licensed contractor. Under Pennsylvania’s Acts 194 and 161 and the EPA’s NESHAP regulations, regulated asbestos must be removed by a state-certified abatement contractor before demolition can disturb it. This isn’t optional — it’s the law, and it applies to any home in Horsham where those materials might be present.
The reason this becomes such a problem for homeowners is that most demolition contractors aren’t licensed for asbestos removal. They have to stop, you have to find a separate abatement company, schedules fall apart, and costs climb. We hold a Pennsylvania state asbestos contractor license and handle abatement in-house. When something turns up — and in Horsham’s post-war housing stock, it happens more often than people expect — the job doesn’t stop. The abatement gets handled, and demolition continues without the project going sideways.
The honest answer is that it depends on scope, and any contractor who gives you a firm number over the phone without seeing the space is guessing. A single-room gut — kitchen or bathroom — will run differently than a full-floor or whole-house interior demolition. Factors that affect cost include the size of the space, how much material needs to be removed and hauled, whether hazardous materials are present, and what access looks like on the property.
In Horsham specifically, the age of the housing stock adds a layer that affects pricing on a lot of jobs. Pre-demo testing and abatement — if asbestos or lead is found — add cost, but they’re required by law and not something a legitimate contractor can skip. What we offer is a free, on-site estimate that gives you a real number based on what’s actually in front of us. The beat-any-estimate guarantee means that if you’ve gotten a quote from another licensed contractor for the same scope of work, we’ll come in lower. Cash discounts are available for qualifying projects as well.
Yes — we serve all of Horsham Township, including areas near Route 611 and the former Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Willow Grove. The ongoing redevelopment of that 862-acre site is generating real demolition and environmental remediation activity in the township, and our full-service model — testing, abatement, demolition, and waterproofing — is well-suited for the kind of complex, multi-phase work that comes with that type of project.
For homeowners and property owners near the former base, the environmental awareness in that part of the township is understandably high. The PFAS contamination that was detected in the area’s groundwater in 2014 made it very clear what the cost of mishandled environmental hazards looks like. We bring EPA and HUD compliant processes, HEPA filtration systems, and certified hazmat credentials to every project — not just the large commercial ones. Whether you’re a homeowner doing a gut renovation or a developer working on a larger scope, the same standards apply.
Under the EPA’s Lead Renovation, Repair, and Painting Rule — commonly called the RRP Rule — any contractor working on a pre-1978 residential building must be lead-safe certified. The rule applies to renovation and demolition work that disturbs painted surfaces above certain thresholds. Pennsylvania enforces this at the state level as well. So if your Horsham home was built before 1978, which describes the vast majority of the township’s residential housing stock, lead paint compliance isn’t optional for whoever you hire.
What this means practically is that a contractor who isn’t RRP-certified shouldn’t be doing demolition work in your home — and if they are, the liability for any violation falls on the homeowner as much as the contractor. We hold a Certified Lead Inspector and Risk Assessor designation, which goes beyond basic RRP certification. Lead paint is identified, documented, and handled correctly before and during demolition. You’re not left wondering whether it was dealt with properly after the fact.
Cash discounts are available for qualifying projects, and we offer free estimates with no obligation to book. The beat-any-estimate guarantee also applies — if you’re getting quotes from multiple contractors for a demolition job in Horsham and another licensed contractor comes in lower for the same scope of work, we’ll beat it.
Horsham homeowners tend to do their homework before hiring, and that’s a good thing. The range of home values in the township — from more modest post-war ranches to higher-end properties — means people are approaching renovation budgets from different places. What the discount and guarantee combination is designed to do is remove the assumption that hiring a credentialed, fully licensed environmental and demolition contractor has to cost significantly more than hiring someone without those credentials. You shouldn’t have to choose between a contractor who’s actually qualified and one who fits your budget. In most cases with us, you don’t have to.
Other Services we provide in Horsham