Reconstruction and Rebuild

Reconstruction and Rebuild After Property Damage

Rebuild begins after the property is stabilized and the restoration scope is clear. The goal is to move from damage control to durable repair.

Safety guidanceInsurance workflowLocal relevance

Damage type explained

This service page explains framing, drywall, plaster repair, flooring, painting, trim, roofing, siding, windows, doors, masonry, cabinetry, and finish work.

Step-by-step restoration process

The process includes documented mitigation, approved scope, material selections, scheduling, repair execution, quality review, and final closeout notes.

Safety warnings

Do not begin cosmetic repair before moisture, smoke, odor, mold, or structural concerns are resolved.

Insurance documentation workflow

Documentation should include photos, affected-room notes, measurements, moisture readings when relevant, emergency service records, and rebuild scope separated from mitigation.

Process

Restoration process

01

Emergency call and safety review.

02

Stabilization or mitigation.

03

Documentation and room-by-room scope notes.

04

Xactimate-compatible estimate site files when applicable.

05

Restoration, rebuild, and final walkthrough.

Questions and Answers

Restoration, safety, and insurance basics.

When does rebuild begin after mitigation?

Rebuild planning usually starts after emergency stabilization, documentation, drying or remediation decisions, and scope review. Permanent repairs should align with the accepted repair scope.

Is rebuild different from emergency mitigation?

Yes. Mitigation stabilizes and reduces further damage; rebuild restores damaged materials after the emergency phase and documentation are addressed.

Why does scope detail matter for rebuild?

Detailed scopes help clarify rooms, materials, quantities, finishes, and repair sequencing. This reduces confusion between the owner, adjuster, and restoration team.

Can the company guarantee insurance will pay for rebuild?

No. Coverage depends on the policy, cause of loss, exclusions, deductible, carrier review, and adjuster approval.

What should be photographed before rebuild?

Approved documentation should show damaged areas, removed materials when appropriate, temporary protection, drying records, and rebuild-ready conditions without exposing private details.

Fire and Storm Restoration

Call Fire and Storm Restoration before damage gets harder to document.

Emergency stabilization, standards-informed mitigation, insurance-ready documentation, and restoration scope support for Chicagoland properties.

Call 1(464) 274-1476