Full home renovation

Full Home Renovation

Multi-room projects with one point of contact.

One contract, phased delivery, and aligned finishes across rooms — for families who want the whole home to feel intentional.

Scroll to read

Full home renovation coordinates kitchens, bathrooms, and living spaces under one program — one finish palette, one schedule, one accountable team. Bruce Interior Renovation manages whole-home upgrades across Adelaide with staged clarity.

When full home renovation makes sense

Homeowners choose whole-home programs when multiple rooms are outdated, services are at end of life, or they plan to remain in the property long term. Replacing kitchen, bathrooms, flooring, and interior linings in separate years often costs more in mobilisation and creates finish mismatches. A coordinated program aligns trades, bulk-orders materials, and delivers a coherent result.

Full renovation is not always the right answer. If one bathroom and a kitchen suffice, staged single-room projects may fit budget better. We advise honestly after walking your property.

Typical scope

Programs commonly include kitchen and bathroom upgrades, living and dining refinements, bedroom updates, hallway and stair improvements, internal door replacement, flooring continuity, lighting refresh, and selective electrical upgrade. Structural changes — removing walls, adding openings — are scoped with engineering where required.

Living arrangements: Many clients vacate during intensive phases; others remain with staged no-go zones. We plan around your choice and set realistic expectations for noise, dust, and services outages.

Sequencing and staging

Order matters. Wet areas and kitchen rough-in often precede broad flooring installation. Painting follows plaster completion; fix-out follows painting where possible to reduce damage. We publish a sequence at contract stage and update it when supply or inspection dates shift.

Staged handover within a whole-home job is possible — for example, completing a bedroom wing before kitchen demolition — when layout allows. That flexibility helps families who cannot leave entirely.

Selections at scale

Whole-home renovation involves dozens of decisions. We use selection schedules grouping flooring, paint, hardware, and fittings so choices stay consistent room to room. Sample boards reviewed in natural light at your property beat showroom decisions made under LED.

Budget and contingency

Larger scopes carry larger unknowns. We include provisional sums for latent conditions — subfloor repair, asbestos, rewiring — with clear rules for how those are triggered and approved. Contingency is not padding; it is honesty about what older Adelaide homes conceal.

Adelaide housing contexts

From double-brick villas in Hyde Park to timber-framed homes in the foothills, construction type drives methodology. We adapt strip-out, fixing methods, and insulation approach accordingly. Heritage overlays in some councils affect external works; internal renovation is usually less restricted but not unregulated.

Next steps

Single contract, staged delivery

Whole-home work does not mean every room open at once. We sequence wet areas, kitchen manufacture, and flooring so your household retains usable zones. One contract holder coordinates trades — you are not left to reconcile electrician and tiler schedules yourself.

Finish palettes are agreed once and applied consistently. Consistent finishes tie the program together.

Explore multi-room examples in our portfolio, understand delivery stages on the process page, and request a quote for a whole-home consultation.

Temporary facilities

When both kitchen and bathrooms are offline, we define sequence so one wet area remains where possible. Portable facilities or relative accommodation are client decisions — we document program honestly so you can plan.

Single point of accountability

One contract holder coordinates trades across phases. You are not left to resolve tiler and electrician conflicts directly. That coordination is part of what you pay for in whole-home scope.

Colour and material palette

Whole-home work needs one palette document — floor, paint, stone, tile, hardware. Without it, rooms completed months apart drift in tone. We maintain a selection schedule with lock dates.