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Here's where we're at - flooring is laid in, the trim work is done, and we're moving into paint. The wood-look plank flooring runs wall to wall, and the angled ceiling lines are drywalled smooth and clean. Recessed lighting is already roughed in up top. The mini-split on the wall handles heating and cooling without any ductwork headaches. Every piece of this was thought through from the start.
What makes an attic conversion work - really work - is treating it like a real room, not an afterthought. That means proper insulation behind the walls, a climate control solution that actually fits the space, solid finish trim around the doors, and flooring that can handle foot traffic for years. The spray foam you can see tucked behind the unfinished access area tells you this space was built tight.
This is the kind of project that adds real, usable square footage to your home without touching the footprint. Whether it becomes a bedroom, a home office, or a bonus living area, the result is the same - space your family actually uses. That's what we're after on every build, whether it's a full custom home or a smaller-scale conversion like this one.