Drying a house is only half of getting your life back. After Alvarez Water Services removes the wet drywall, insulation, and flooring, our reconstruction crew puts the room back the way it was so you are not chasing a separate contractor through a Monmouth County winter. We hang and finish board, reset trim and baseboard, lay flooring, and paint to match, with one continuous timeline from the first extraction to the final walkthrough. The advantage of keeping mitigation and rebuild under one roof is accountability: there is no gap where a drying contractor hands off to a builder and each blames the other for what went wrong in between. The same documented scope that dried your Red Bank home carries straight into the repair, so your insurer sees one consistent file from the first wet reading to the last coat of paint. One company owns the whole repair. Start it at 848-310-7885.
- Drywall replacement + finish
- Hardwood, LVP, tile, carpet flooring
- Cabinetry + trim work
- Paint + finish work
- Insurance scope-aligned
- Single-source contracting
Coordinating With The Insurance Adjuster Through Reconstruction
Reconstruction scope changes during the rebuild are normal โ sometimes we open a wall and find conditions that were not visible during mitigation (galvanized supply line behind the affected drywall, knob-and-tube wiring in older Red Bank homes, structural damage from a long-ago repair that was hidden behind the now-removed material). These conditions become supplemental scope items.
The way we handle supplements determines whether the project stays on schedule or stalls for weeks. Our protocol: photograph the discovered condition immediately, write a supplemental scope item with line-item pricing in Xactimate format, submit to the adjuster with the photos, request approval before proceeding. Most carriers approve straightforward supplements within 2-5 business days. We continue with non-supplement work in parallel so the project doesn't sit idle waiting on approvals.
For supplements involving structural concerns (load-bearing wall changes, electrical service updates, plumbing system upgrades), we may need to bring in a licensed structural engineer or specialty trade for an opinion. That extends the supplement timeline but is the right call when conditions warrant it.
Why The Same Crew Should Handle Mitigation AND Reconstruction
The most common pattern that hurts Red Bank insurance restoration clients is the hand-off problem. The mitigation contractor extracts water and runs drying equipment. Then the homeowner hires a separate general contractor for the rebuild. Three weeks of scope arguments later, the rebuild starts โ except the GC's price doesn't match the mitigation scope, the carrier's adjuster has to re-evaluate, and items that should have been documented during demo are now invisible behind new drywall. That sequence turns 4-week projects into 3-month projects.
Our reconstruction is the back-end of the same job. The crew that pulled out the wet drywall in week one is the crew putting the new drywall in week three. The Xactimate scope from mitigation maps directly to the rebuild scope โ no separate negotiation. Photos taken during demo (so we know what was behind every wall) inform the rebuild. Specialty trades (plaster matching, hardwood refinishing, custom millwork, tile setters) get coordinated by us, not bounced to the homeowner to find. One contract. One phone number. One walkthrough at the end.