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Los Angeles design-build · CSLB #1105249

Custom homes and full renovations in Los Angeles — designed, permitted, and built under one contract.

Your vision stays yours. We make it buildable, coordinated, and code-safe.

Most LA custom-home and full-renovation projects do not stall on the vision. They stall in the handoff — between architect, plan check, engineering, and the field. We close that handoff.

  • CSLB #1105249 · Licensed, bonded, insured
  • BBB A+ accredited
  • 100+ projects completed across LA County
  • Design + build under one contract

This page is for you if

  • You own a home, lot, or tear-down in Los Angeles County and the project sits between $200K and $2.5M+.
  • You either have architectural plans in hand, or you are starting from a vision and a piece of land.
  • Your property sits in a jurisdiction that adds real complexity — hillside ordinance, HPOZ overlay, coastal zone, VHFHSZ fire zone, or all four.
  • You want to be the decision-maker, not the project manager.
  • You are looking to decide on a builder in the next 12 months — not next year, not "someday."

This page is not for you if

  • Your full scope is under $200K. We are not the right fit at that level; you'll get better service from a specialty remodeler.
  • You are exploring and won't decide on anything for 12+ months.
  • You want the lowest bid in the market. We are not the cheapest GC in LA, and we are honest about that.
  • You expect a fixed-price contract before construction documents and engineering are finished. That bid would be fiction.

What "one contract, one team" actually buys you

Hiring an architect, a structural engineer, an MEP engineer, a permit expediter, a geotechnical consultant, and a general contractor as six separate parties means six contracts, six invoicing cycles, six accountability gaps — and the homeowner ends up as the de-facto project manager. That is how a 12-month project becomes a 24-month one. Here is what we fold into one accountable team instead.

  1. Design coordination, in-house or with your architect. If you already have an architect you trust, we pressure-test their drawings against your budget and the construction reality before plan check. If you don't, our in-house design team starts from your references and the lot.
  2. Preconstruction budgeting before ground breaks. A line-item cost model — site work, structural, MEP, finishes, allowances, contingency — built against your specific scope, not industry averages. You see the number before the contract is signed.
  3. Permit pathway mapped in week one. LADBS, Department of City Planning, CEQA, hillside ordinance, HPOZ overlay, coastal commission, fire department review, Title 24 2026 compliance. We tell you which apply to your address and what each one adds to the timeline.
  4. Trade sequencing on a single timeline. A custom home runs 25 to 40 trades; a full renovation runs 12 to 20. When plumbing, electrical, and HVAC each arrive on their own schedule, walls get reopened twice and inspections get rescheduled. We sequence them so the wall closes once.
  5. Material lead-time scheduling against the critical path. Imported stone, European windows, custom millwork, specialty fixtures — 12 to 20 week lead times are normal. We order against your construction critical path so the build never stops waiting on a cabinet shipment.
  6. A structured decision calendar. A custom home is hundreds of decisions. We set yours against the construction schedule, so you never have to pick a tile three weeks before install or a fixture under pressure.
  7. Weekly site reporting in writing. Photo log, RFI status, change-order register, schedule variance. You'll know exactly where the project is on any given Friday without calling us.
  8. Written change orders, priced and approved before work continues. Where renovation budgets usually break is the verbal "yeah just add it" that becomes a surprise invoice three weeks later. Our contracts don't allow that path.
  9. Inspection management end to end. We schedule, prepare, and walk every inspection — rough frame, plumbing, electrical, gas, mechanical, final. You don't sit at home waiting for an inspector who might not show.
  10. 12-month workmanship warranty and a punch-list that actually closes. 30-day, 90-day, and one-year walkthroughs at no cost. If something we built isn't right, we come back.

How we build with you

  1. Step 1

    Discovery

    Free 30-minute project review. We pull your address against LADBS, ZIMAS, and the hillside, HPOZ, coastal, and VHFHSZ overlays before we meet. You leave with a permit map, a scope confidence range, and a code-trigger list — Title 24, CEBC 50%, hillside ordinance — for your specific lot.

  2. Step 2

    Preconstruction

    Design coordination, structural and MEP engineering, plan-check management, line-item budgeting, decision calendar, long-lead procurement schedule. Most of the cost-overrun risk lives here, so most of our time does too. Custom homes: 6 to 12 months. Full renovations: 2 to 4 months.

  3. Step 3

    Build

    Single-point project management across 25-40 trades (custom home) or 12-20 (renovation). Inspections walked, change orders priced in writing, weekly photo reports. Custom homes: 12 to 18 months on a 3,500-6,000 sq ft footprint. Full renovations: 6 to 12 months.

A recent project

Hillside lot at project kickoff showing original 1970s ranch home before demolition
Before
Foundation pour in progress with hillside caissons and retaining wall framework
Foundation
Completed contemporary hillside home exterior with cantilevered upper level and floor-to-ceiling glass
After · exterior
Interior view of double-height great room with stone fireplace and integrated wall millwork
After · interior

Custom hillside home · Encino Hills

5,200 sq ft · $2.3M contract · 18-month build

  • Lot: Encino Hills, south of Ventura Blvd, VHFHSZ + Baseline Hillside Ordinance overlays
  • Soils, geo, and hillside foundation re-engineering completed before plan check submittal
  • Cleared LADBS plan check, hillside ordinance grading review, and protected-oak arborist review
  • 18 months from groundbreak to certificate of occupancy
  • Final contract within 2.1% of preconstruction budget

For context: a full renovation at $500K in a flat-lot Studio City home looks like the same level of design discipline and permit care, scoped within the existing footprint. The work changes; the process doesn't.

We know the LA jurisdiction map

Twelve LA neighborhoods we have pulled permits in. Each has its own overlay logic — getting it wrong adds months.

  • Hollywood Hills

    Baseline Hillside Ordinance, VHFHSZ, geological soils reports, fire department access on narrow roads, haul-route permits for significant grading.

  • Bel Air

    Mansionization Ordinance, hillside grading limits, view-corridor protections, mega-mansion review for very large projects.

  • Pacific Palisades

    Coastal Commission dual jurisdiction, Chapter 7A fire-resistant assemblies, post-Palisades-Fire expedited rebuild track, hillside ordinance.

  • Encino Hills

    BHO south of Ventura Blvd, VHFHSZ, protected-oak ordinance with arborist review, BMO/RFA mansionization.

  • Brentwood

    Hillside zones with grading limits, view ordinance, BMO/RFA in flat areas, fire zone designation in canyon properties.

  • Santa Monica

    Independent city — permits through Santa Monica Building & Safety, not LADBS. Green Building Ordinance, soft-story retrofit mandate, coastal zone overlay.

  • Manhattan Beach

    Independent city permits, coastal zone overlay, tight setback rules, height limits strictly enforced.

  • Studio City

    Hillside ordinance south of Ventura, BMO/RFA in flat areas, Specific Plan considerations on major corridors.

  • Sherman Oaks

    BMO/RFA, hillside ordinance in south-of-Ventura properties, Specific Plan along Ventura Blvd, older-home system upgrades typical.

  • Hancock Park

    HPOZ overlay — Historic Preservation Overlay Zone review required for exterior changes and additions.

  • Pasadena

    Independent city permits through Pasadena Building & Safety, landmark district reviews, design review for many additions.

  • Silver Lake

    Hillside ordinance, older housing stock with knob-and-tube and galvanized plumbing common, Specific Plan in some corridors.

Where we put our risk on the line

Every NPLD contract carries these operational guarantees in writing. They are not slogans.

  • If we miss a permit deadline through our negligence, we eat the city's expedite fees. Not "we'll try to make it up." A line item in your contract.
  • If a city inspection fails on work we performed, we re-do the work at zero cost. Re-inspection fees included.
  • Scope is documented line item by line item in the contract. Price does not move unless scope moves — and scope changes require your written approval before work continues.
  • Change orders are priced and signed before any work happens. No "yeah just add it." No surprise invoices.
  • If at punch-list you can identify a deliverable from our contract that we did not produce, we install it or rebuild it at no charge. The punch list closes; we do not.

Financing the build

In-house financing through Hearth and partner lenders. We never push debt — and we don't earn lender fees. Our job is to build well; the lenders' job is to fund well.

Pre-qualify in 60 seconds

Soft-credit pull through Hearth. Real offers from up to 17 partner lenders, no impact to your credit score, no obligation. We get a copy of your offers so we can build the budget around what you actually have.

Start with Hearth pre-qual

Use your home equity

HELOC or cash-out refinance against the existing house. Most LA homeowners in our $500K-$2M range fund renovations this way. We'll send you the side-by-side math against a construction loan during your project review.

Discuss equity options

Construction-to-perm loan

For ground-up custom homes and tear-down-rebuilds, a construction-to-perm loan covers the build and converts to a standard mortgage at completion. We work with specialty LA lenders who actually understand 18-month build timelines.

Discuss construction loans

Financing via Hearth (Aspire Financial Services LLC NMLS #1810501) and other partner lenders. Subject to credit approval. NP Line Design Inc. (CSLB #1105249) is not a lender and earns no lender fees.

Who actually shows up

Netanel Presman · General Contractor

Netanel runs the field. He is the one walking the job, sequencing the trades, and standing in front of the inspector. CSLB-licensed under #1105249; 100+ LA projects completed.

Jason · Design, Permits, and Coordination

Jason handles design coordination, permit pathway mapping, scheduling, and homeowner communication. Same email and phone every week. No PM swap-outs.

Common questions, honest answers

How long does a custom home actually take in LA?

Eighteen to thirty-six months from first sketch to certificate of occupancy. Design and permits run 6 to 12 months. Construction on a 3,500 to 6,000 sq ft home runs 12 to 18 months. Hillside or coastal overlays can add another 6 to 12. Builders who quote you 12 months total are quoting you a number that has not survived plan check.

Why do bids vary so wildly?

Two reasons. First, allowances — one bid includes finishes, fixtures, appliances, and landscaping; another includes a shell with "allowances" the homeowner pays separately. Second, change-order assumptions — a $500/sq ft bid that becomes $750/sq ft in changes is more expensive than a $650/sq ft bid that includes everything. We line-item the comparison so you see what's actually different.

Can we live in the house during a full renovation?

For a true full renovation — every room touched, systems replaced — generally no. Dust, fumes, disabled utilities, and exposed framing make the house inhabitable for at least the rough-work phase. If the floor plan permits, we can sometimes phase the work so you live in one wing while we work on another. We assess that during your project review.

What is the CEBC 50% rule?

The California Existing Building Code (CEBC) requires that when renovation costs exceed 50% of the structure's replacement value, the entire house must be brought up to current code. That can add six figures in unforeseen requirements — electrical service upgrade, seismic retrofit, Title 24, full insulation. We calculate the threshold before scope is finalized; if you're near the line, we can phase the work across separate permits to stay under it.

Do you handle hillside, HPOZ, and coastal projects?

Yes, all three. Hillside means LADBS Baseline Hillside Ordinance plus soils and geological reports plus haul-route permits. HPOZ means Historic Preservation Overlay Zone review for exterior changes. Coastal means California Coastal Commission dual jurisdiction adding 6 to 12 months. We've pulled permits across all three and know which plan-checker covers which zone.

Do you offer financing?

We don't lend; we connect you with lenders. Our primary partner is Hearth — a 60-second soft-credit pre-qual that returns real offers from up to 17 partner lenders. We earn no fees on Hearth loans. For ground-up builds, we also work with LA-based construction-to-perm lenders who understand 18-month build timelines.

What is the typical financing structure for LA renovations?

For renovations between $200K and $1M, most of our clients use a HELOC or cash-out refinance against existing equity — fastest to close, simplest paperwork. For larger renovations and custom homes, a renovation loan or construction-to-perm loan is standard. Closing timelines run 30 to 60 days; we factor that into your project start date.

What does a project review actually include?

Thirty minutes, free, no follow-up sales sequence. We pull your address against LADBS, ZIMAS, and the hillside, HPOZ, coastal, VHFHSZ overlays before we meet. You leave with a permit map for your specific property, a scope confidence range, a code-trigger list, and a realistic timeline. If we are not the right fit for your project, we tell you that and recommend someone who is.

Apply for a project review

The next step is an eight-field application — about three minutes. You'll hear from us within one business day with either a calendar invite or an honest "we're not the right fit, here's who is."

Apply for Project Review

Prefer to talk first? (818) 600-7492 · Or book a free consultation on our main site.