Custom Home Building in Clanton, AL

Building a custom home is the most personal construction project there is. Every decision — the floor plan, the materials, the finishes, the way light moves through the spaces — reflects how your family actually lives. The quality of the outcome depends entirely on the builder you choose. Recon Reconstruction of Alabama builds custom homes for families throughout Clanton and Chilton County — managing every phase from the first site evaluation through the final walkthrough with the same owners involved from start to finish.

What We Build Custom Home Construction Services

Recon Reconstruction House Banner

Phase by Phase

The Custom Home Building Process

Custom home construction is a long, complex project that rewards thorough planning and clear communication. Here is how Recon Reconstruction manages the process from first contact through move-in.
1

Pre-construction

one to three months before groundbreaking. 

2

Foundation and site preparation

Site preparation, excavation, and foundation work. The foundation is the most consequential structural phase of the build -- everything above it depends on it performing correctly over the life of the home. We do not rush this phase.

3

Framing

Structural framing of walls, floors, and roof systems. Framing is when the home takes shape visibly for the first time. It is also when the accuracy of the pre-construction planning is tested -- dimensions that were planned must be built.

4

Rough mechanicals

Plumbing, electrical, and HVAC rough-in occurs after framing and before insulation and drywall close the walls. All three trades are coordinated in sequence to avoid conflicts in the wall and ceiling cavities. County inspections occur at the completion of rough mechanicals before insulation or drywall can proceed.
5

Insulation

Building envelope insulation installed after rough mechanicals are inspected and approved. Insulation selection and installation quality directly affect the home's energy performance and operating costs over its life.
6

Drywall

Drywall installation and finish work. Board hanging, taping, mudding, sanding, and priming. The quality of the drywall finish is one of the most visible quality indicators in a new home -- it is the surface against which everything else is applied.
7

Interior finish work

Flooring installation, interior trim and door installation, cabinet installation coordinated through McRae Cabinet and Design, countertop templating and installation, hardware installation, paint, and all interior finish details. This phase is where the home's character comes to life.
8

Exterior completion

Final exterior finishes, exterior doors and windows sealed and trimmed, site work and grading, driveway and walkway installation, and final roofing details.
9

Final inspections and punch list

Final county inspections, certificate of occupancy, and a comprehensive punch list walkthrough with the homeowner. Every item on the punch list is addressed before the project is closed.

Site Preparation and Foundation Where Every Build Starts

The foundation is the most important structural component of your home. Every other structural element — framing, floors, walls, roof — depends on the foundation performing correctly and consistently over decades of seasonal soil movement, load changes, and weather cycles.
Recon Reconstruction approaches foundation work with the care it deserves. Every build begins with a thorough site evaluation that assesses soil conditions, topography, drainage patterns, and any site-specific factors that affect foundation design. In Chilton County, expansive clay soils are common and require foundation designs that account for seasonal moisture-driven movement. We factor those conditions into the foundation design and specification rather than using a one-size-fits-all approach that may be adequate in some soil conditions and inadequate in others.
Foundation type — slab, crawlspace, or basement — depends on the site conditions, the home design, the homeowner’s preferences, and cost considerations. We discuss the tradeoffs of each option honestly during the pre-construction planning phase and recommend the approach that best fits the specific site and project.
Site preparation before foundation work includes clearing vegetation where required, rough grading to establish proper drainage away from the future foundation, and any fill or compaction work required by the soil conditions. Utility trenching for water, sewer or septic, power, and gas connections is coordinated during the site preparation phase before foundation work begins.
Recon Reconstruction House Banner
Recon Reconstruction House Banner

Structural Framing The Skeleton of Your Home

Framing is the phase most homeowners find most exciting — it is when the home first becomes three-dimensional and you can walk through the rooms and understand how the spaces will feel.
It is also one of the most technically demanding phases of residential construction. Dimensional accuracy in framing determines how every downstream finish material fits — flooring transitions, door and window trim, cabinet installations, tile layouts. Framing that is consistently plumb, level, and true to dimension makes every finish trade more straightforward. Framing that is not creates problems that compound through the rest of the build.
Recon Reconstruction frames to a standard that supports the finish work above it. We use quality dimensional lumber specified for each application, install to the engineering specifications governing the structural design of the home, and maintain the dimensional accuracy that finish work depends on throughout the framing process.
Roof framing — whether conventionally framed or truss-framed depending on the design — is coordinated with the roofing installation that follows. We design rooflines that are both structurally sound and architecturally consistent with the home design.

Mechanical Rough-Ins Plumbing, Electrical and HVAC

The mechanical rough-in phase — plumbing, electrical, and HVAC installed in the walls and ceilings before they are closed — is one of the most coordination-intensive phases of a custom home build. Three separate trades are working in the same wall and ceiling cavities simultaneously, and conflicts between them create expensive changes to resolve.
Recon Reconstruction sequences the mechanical trades and coordinates their work to prevent conflicts before they occur. Plumbing drain-waste-vent lines, water supply rough-in, electrical panel and branch circuit rough-in, and HVAC duct work and equipment placement are all planned in the pre-construction phase and coordinated in sequence during installation.
All rough-in work is performed by licensed subcontractors holding current Alabama licenses in their respective trades. The county inspection at rough mechanical completion — before insulation and drywall — validates that all three systems were installed to code before the walls close. We do not skip or rush this inspection.
Recon Reconstruction House Banner
Recon Reconstruction House Banner

Insulation and Energy Efficiency for Alabama Homes

Alabama’s climate creates specific insulation requirements. High summer temperatures and humidity demand a building envelope that keeps conditioned air in and solar heat gain managed. Mild winters do not require the extreme insulation levels of northern climates but still benefit from a properly sealed and insulated envelope.
We install insulation to Alabama energy code requirements as a baseline and discuss options for exceeding code minimums where the investment in better insulation delivers measurable return in reduced HVAC operating costs over the life of the home.
Attic insulation is particularly important in the Alabama climate. A properly insulated and ventilated attic assembly reduces heat transfer into the conditioned space, extends HVAC equipment life, and has one of the most direct impacts on monthly energy costs of any single component in the building envelope.
We also address air sealing — the less visible but equally important practice of sealing penetrations and transitions in the building envelope that allow conditioned air to escape and outside air to infiltrate. Air sealing and insulation together determine the actual energy performance of the building envelope, not just its theoretical R-value.

Drywall, Flooring and Interior Finish Work

Interior finish work is where a custom home becomes the specific home a family will live in. The quality of every finish trade — drywall, flooring, trim, cabinets, tile, hardware — is visible every day for the life of the home.
Drywall installation and finish quality is one of the most immediate quality indicators in a new home. We install drywall to achieve a Level 4 finish — the standard that produces a smooth, consistent surface under paint without telegraphing fasteners, seams, or mud ridges at grazing light angles. This requires proper board installation, quality taping and mudding, thorough sanding, and priming before paint. We do not rush drywall finish work because the results are permanent.
Flooring selection and installation is coordinated during the pre-construction phase. We install hardwood, luxury vinyl plank, tile, laminate, and carpet throughout custom homes in Clanton and Chilton County. Flooring installation sequencing — what goes in before cabinets, what goes in after — is managed to produce clean transitions and eliminate field-cut fitting issues.
Interior trim — baseboards, door casings, window sills, crown molding, built-in details — is where craftsmanship is most visible. Tight miters, consistent reveals, properly coped joints at inside corners, and clean intersections at transitions define the quality of a home’s interior finish. We install interior trim to a standard that reflects the quality of the home it is installed in.
Cabinet coordination through McRae Cabinet and Design is managed as a fully integrated part of the construction schedule. Cabinet installation timing — after drywall and before flooring in most cases — is sequenced to allow countertop templating and installation to proceed on schedule without holding up downstream trades.
Recon Reconstruction House Banner

What to Expect at Each
Phase of Your Custom Home Build

Understanding what happens and when keeps expectations aligned throughout a long project.
Here is a realistic timeline overview for a standard custom home build in the Clanton area.

Months 1 to 3
Pre-construction

Site evaluation, design and planning decisions, all material selections, permit application, and construction scheduling. Nothing breaks ground until this phase is complete.

Month 3 to 4
Site preparation and foundation

Site clearing, grading, utility trenching, foundation forming and pouring, foundation cure time, and waterproofing. Foundation inspection occurs before framing begins.

Months 4 to 6
Framing

Structural wall framing, floor systems, roof framing or truss installation, sheathing, and weather-resistant barrier installation. Framing inspection occurs at completion.

Months 6 to 7
Rough mechanicals

Plumbing rough-in, electrical rough-in, and HVAC rough-in coordinated in sequence. Rough mechanical inspection occurs before insulation or drywall can begin.

Month 7
Insulation

Building envelope insulation installed and insulation inspection completed before drywall begins.

Months 7 to 9
Drywall and interior rough finish

Drywall hang, tape, mud, sand, and prime. Cabinet delivery coordination and installation. Interior trim rough-in.

Months 9 to 11
Interior finish

Flooring installation, countertop templating and installation, interior trim completion, paint, hardware installation, plumbing trim, electrical trim, and HVAC trim.

Months 11 to 12
Exterior completion and site work

Final exterior finishes, site work, driveway and walkways, final landscaping grade, and punch list completion.

Final
Certificate of occupancy and walkthrough

Final county inspections, certificate of occupancy, comprehensive punch list walkthrough with homeowner, and project closeout documentation.

Building on Your Land in Chilton County

Homeowners who already own land in Chilton County or are considering purchasing a lot before contracting a builder should understand the site evaluation process we follow before any build begins.
Soil testing tells us what the soil beneath the site will do — how it compresses, whether it is expansive, and what bearing capacity it provides for the foundation. In Chilton County, where clay soils are common, soil testing is not optional. It is the information on which foundation design is based. We recommend soil testing before finalizing any new construction budget on a raw or previously undeveloped lot.
Perc testing is required for any lot that will use a private septic system. Perc test results determine whether the lot can support a septic system and what type. A lot that fails a perc test cannot support conventional residential occupancy without an alternative wastewater system — a significant consideration in lot selection.
Elevation and drainage affect where on the lot the home can be positioned, how the foundation is designed, and what site grading and drainage work is required. We assess elevation and drainage during the initial site evaluation and identify any conditions that will affect construction approach or cost.
Setback requirements in Chilton County determine the buildable area of the lot. We review setback requirements for every lot before finalizing the site plan and home position.
Utility access — power, gas, water, sewer or septic, and telecommunications — varies significantly between in-town and rural lots. We assess utility availability and connection or extension costs during the initial site evaluation. Utility extension costs on rural lots can be substantial and need to be in the project budget before construction begins.
Call us before you purchase a lot. A thirty-minute site visit and conversation before you close on land can identify conditions that affect construction feasibility or cost significantly. It is a conversation that costs nothing and can save a great deal.
Recon Reconstruction House Banner
Recon Reconstruction House Banner

Custom Home Building Cost in Clanton, AL

Cost is the question every homeowner wants answered early. Here is an honest framework for thinking about it.
Custom home construction cost in the Central Alabama market is driven by four primary variables.
Size is the most obvious variable. More square footage means more of everything — framing, insulation, drywall, flooring, mechanical systems, and finish work. Cost per square foot does not scale linearly with size — there are fixed costs that are distributed across the total square footage — but total project cost scales meaningfully with total size.
Design complexity affects cost independently of size. A simple rectangle with a straightforward roofline costs less per square foot to build than a home with multiple roof planes, dormers, complex ceiling conditions, or intricate exterior detailing. Simple designs are less expensive to frame, roof, and finish. Complex designs are more expensive — and more distinctive.
Finish level is the variable most directly within the homeowner’s control. The difference between standard-grade and premium-grade selections in flooring, cabinetry, countertops, fixtures, windows, and hardware can double the finish cost of a home with identical framing. We work through finish selections during pre-construction with honest cost implications for each decision so there are no surprises in the final budget.
Site conditions add cost that is independent of the home itself. Difficult soil conditions that require engineered foundation solutions, lots that require significant clearing or grading, utility extensions from distant connection points, and difficult site access all add to the total project cost. Site evaluation is the first step in understanding what a specific lot will cost to build on.
We provide written estimates based on a thorough scope of work and specific design and finish decisions. We do not quote per-square-foot estimates that do not account for the variables that actually drive cost on a specific project. Call us at 205-955-0807 to discuss your project and schedule a consultation.

Why Clanton Families Choose Recon Reconstruction to Build Their Home

Recon Reconstruction House Banner

Frequently Asked Questions

Custom Home Building
in Clanton, AL

A custom home build in the Clanton area typically runs seven to twelve months from groundbreaking through certificate of occupancy, depending on size, design complexity, site conditions, and the efficiency of the permitting and inspection process. Pre-construction planning adds one to three months before groundbreaking begins. The total timeline from first consultation to move-in is typically ten to fifteen months. The most significant variable within a homeowner's control is the speed and completeness of pre-construction decision-making -- projects where all material and finish decisions are made before groundbreaking consistently complete faster than projects where decisions are made mid-construction. We provide a realistic project-specific timeline at the outset of every engagement.
Custom home construction cost in the Central Alabama market depends on size, design complexity, finish level, and site conditions. We provide written estimates based on a thorough scope of work and specific design decisions -- not per-square-foot rules of thumb that do not account for the variables that actually drive cost on a specific project. Any builder who gives you a confident price-per-square-foot estimate without a detailed scope and site evaluation is giving you a number that will change significantly. Call us at 205-955-0807 to discuss your project scope and schedule a free consultation where we can give you a realistic picture of what your specific project will cost.
No. As a design-build contractor, Recon Reconstruction manages the planning and design phase as part of the full project engagement. You do not need to arrive with a complete set of architect-stamped plans. We work with you through the floor plan and design decisions in the pre-construction phase. Where projects require structural engineering certification -- which is required by Alabama code for certain structural conditions -- we coordinate that engineering as part of the project scope. If you already have architectural plans, we can build from them. If you do not, we manage that process with you.
A design-build contract covers both the pre-construction planning phase and the construction phase under one agreement with one contractor. It defines the scope of work, the project budget, the payment schedule tied to construction milestones, the project timeline, the change order process, and the responsibilities of each party throughout the project. We use a detailed written contract on every custom home project. Before any money changes hands, you have a clear written document that defines what we are building, what it costs, and how changes are handled if they occur.
Yes -- this is one of the most common starting points for our custom home projects. We perform a thorough site evaluation on every lot before finalizing the construction scope and budget. The evaluation covers soil conditions, topography, drainage, utility access, setback requirements, and any site-specific factors that affect construction approach or cost. For lots with challenging conditions -- difficult soil, limited utility access, significant clearing or grading requirements -- we identify those cost factors during the evaluation so they are in the budget before construction begins, not discovered after. Call us before you begin designing the home and we can give you honest input on what your specific lot will cost to build on.
Chilton County requires inspections at specific phases of residential construction. Standard inspection sequence includes foundation inspection before framing, framing inspection after framing is complete, rough mechanical inspection covering plumbing, electrical, and HVAC before insulation, insulation inspection before drywall, and final inspection at project completion before certificate of occupancy is issued. Individual trade inspections -- plumbing, electrical -- may be required by the specific licensed subcontractors' permits as well. We manage all inspections as part of the construction schedule. No phase proceeds until the preceding phase has been inspected and approved.
Changes during construction -- additions, deletions, substitutions -- are managed through a formal change order process. Every change is documented in writing with a description of the change, the cost impact, and the schedule impact before any work reflecting the change begins. No change is made and no additional cost is incurred without your written approval of the change order. This protects both parties -- you know exactly what a change costs before you approve it, and we have written authorization before we perform work outside the original scope. We discuss the change order process in detail before construction begins so there are no surprises when changes come up.

Ready to Build Your Custom Home in Clanton or Chilton County?

Call Kyle McRae directly at 205-955-0807 to schedule a free consultation. We visit the site, discuss your vision, and give you a straight assessment of what is possible, what it costs, and how long it takes.