Buying With a Plan to Rebuild
When Daniel Czyz purchased his home, he did so with full awareness of what he was taking on. The structure had potential – electrical upgrades had already been completed – but the interior remained largely frozen in the 1980s. Closed-off rooms, a sunken living area, dated finishes, and a layout that restricted flow made it clear that significant work would be required.
He moved in anyway.
For nearly three years, he lived in only half of the house. There was no fully functioning kitchen. Several spaces were unfinished. During that time, he evaluated what he wanted the home to become while searching for a contractor he could actually trust – a process that proved more difficult than expected.
Finding Alignment
Daniel had spoken with other remodelers. One quoted nearly $200 per square foot and even charged a fee simply to provide an estimate. The numbers being presented didn’t align with his expectations or the scope of work. He anticipated the project would exceed six figures, but some proposals felt detached from reality.
The introduction to Eric came through his father, who had previously worked with him. From the start, the conversations felt different. There was openness to Daniel’s ideas, combined with practical suggestions that refined the vision rather than inflating it.
Budget alignment mattered. The final scope came together in a way that made sense financially and structurally.
Reworking Two-Thirds of the Home
The remodel ultimately touched about two-thirds of the house. Walls were removed to create an open-concept layout. A fireplace was taken out. The sunken floor was leveled. Skylights were removed to improve the functionality of the space – a decision Daniel was certain about, especially with frequent movie nights hosting his nephews.
The redesign shifted the home from compartmentalized to cohesive. Spaces that once felt isolated now flowed naturally into one another.
Supply chain challenges during COVID extended the timeline beyond original expectations, but communication remained consistent throughout the process. When materials became difficult to source, alternative solutions were presented quickly, keeping momentum where possible.
An Addition That Elevated the Project
One of the most significant upgrades hadn’t even been part of Daniel’s initial plan. A patio was originally intended as a future phase, something to consider later. During the design process, Eric proposed incorporating it into the current remodel.
The patio design was developed entirely through that collaboration and ultimately became one of the most impactful additions to the home. What started as a renovation evolved into a more comprehensive transformation.
Today, Daniel describes the house as completely different from what he purchased. The layout reflects how he lives, the finishes feel intentional, and the space functions the way it should have from the beginning.
For him, surviving a major remodel came down to partnership – clear communication, aligned expectations, and a willingness to adapt when challenges arose. The result is a home that finally matches the vision he had the day he bought it.

