CITYCOREBUILDERSCityCore Builders · Queens, New York
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The detached and two-family colonials and splits across Queens Village often hide their kitchens in tight, walled-off rear rooms. We remodel those kitchens for how families actually cook and gather, from new cabinetry and counters to opening up the space when the framing allows.
What we do here
Most Queens Village kitchens sit at the back of a colonial or in the lower run of a split-level, separated from the dining room by a load-bearing wall and sized for a era when the kitchen was a closed-off work room. The first conversation is almost always about layout: keeping the existing galley or L-shape and upgrading finishes, reworking to a more efficient U-shape, or removing the wall between the kitchen and dining room to create one open space with an island. On the larger lots common to this neighborhood, that last option sometimes pairs with a rear addition or a bumped-out eating area, which changes both the budget and the timeline.
Approval realities depend on what you touch. A like-for-like remodel that keeps cabinetry, plumbing, and gas in place generally moves quickly. The moment you relocate the gas range or move the sink and dishwasher to a new wall, you are into licensed plumbing work and, for gas, a DOB-permitted job with an inspection before the line is recharged. Taking out a wall between the kitchen and dining room means confirming whether it carries load; in these colonials and splits it frequently does, so the plan includes an engineer-specified beam and the structural permit that goes with it.
Once the layout and permits are settled, the work runs in a predictable order: demolition, then rough plumbing and electrical, inspections, drywall and tile, cabinetry and countertop templating, and finally appliance hookups and the punch list. We sequence around your household so the kitchen is out of service for the shortest stretch possible, and we keep the dust contained on a street where many homes share walls or sit close to a neighbor.
Custom and semi-custom cabinets fit to the room's true dimensions, with storage planned around how you cook rather than the old footprint.
Quartz, granite, and butcher block templated to the new layout, with seams and overhangs detailed for islands and peninsulas.
Backsplashes and floors set on properly prepped substrates, from classic subway to large-format porcelain that suits these older rooms.
Relocated sinks, dishwashers, and gas ranges plus added circuits, GFCI outlets, and under-cabinet lighting, all to code with inspections.
Local advantage
A contractor who works Queens Village regularly already knows how these colonials and splits are framed, where the gas and water typically run, and how the DOB and local inspectors handle kitchen permits. That familiarity keeps surprises out of the schedule and means we can give you a realistic plan before a single cabinet comes out. Being local also keeps us responsive during the build, so questions get answered and inspections get scheduled without the delays that come with a crew traveling in from outside the borough.
Keep exploring
Queens Village, Queens
Tell us about your kitchen and your home, and we will walk you through the layout options, permits, and timeline before any work begins.