Get a new house without leaving the old one behind
Love your neighborhood but your house is outdated? For many homeowners the smart choice is a whole-home remodel or an addition that creates a more modern design, a better floor plan, and living space that actually fits the way life has changed.
Space planning that adapts to changing family needs
Life changes, and homes need to adapt. Whether children have grown, aging parents need to move in, or the goal is aging in place, a remodel or addition can rework the layout without forcing you to leave the neighborhood you already love.
- Children are grown and the home needs a different layout
- Aging parents need a place inside the household plan
- Aging-in-place accommodations make staying home easier
- The floor plan needs more openness, more function, or more square footage

Whole-home improvements that change both function and value
A coordinated remodel can save time and money by doing improvements together, update plumbing and electrical systems to current standards, open cramped layouts, add living space, and improve energy efficiency across the home.

Layout Transformation
Open up a cramped floor plan and make the house work more naturally.
Planning Benefit
Do Not Forget the Outside
Exterior paint, windows, doors, roofing, siding, and new architectural features can complete the transformation.
Inside + Out
Added Living Space
Create room for changing needs while preserving the address and neighborhood you already value.
Addition WorkReal additions and remodels completed by CMB
These finished additions and remodels come directly from the original CMB project archive. Open any project card to browse the full completed gallery.
Need to rethink the layout of your home or add square footage?
Talk to CMB about whole-home remodeling, additions, aging-in-place planning, exterior coordination, and how to modernize the property without giving up the neighborhood.
Continue into baths, kitchens, porches, decks, and roofing or siding
The gallery and service paths now stay inside the new site so the user journey feels complete instead of split between two websites.
