Featured work
Scott Romanoski Construction: a service-business site built around trust.
This project shows a different modernization shape than Canterbury Candles. The public site helps homeowners understand the work, see proof, and request an estimate without turning the business into a generic contractor template.
Open the site, then use this page as the project guide.
The preview below loads the public Romanoski Construction site in a read-only frame. Use the live-site button to inspect the full service-business experience in its own browser tab.
Preview notes
- Shows the actual live site, not a made-up mockup.
- A useful preview for service businesses that need credibility, services, proof, and contact paths to work together.
- The demo focuses on the public homeowner experience and does not imply a hidden ecommerce or admin workflow.
Mobile demo
Open Scott Romanoski Construction in a full browser tab.
The live-site button gives mobile visitors the clearest demo. Small screens do not leave much room for one website inside another.
What to look for
The demo shows how service proof becomes a contact path.
The public site has to answer a homeowner's practical questions: what work fits, whether the contractor is credible, and how to start a serious estimate conversation.
Service areas for remodeling, additions, doors, decks, patios, and Bilco work
Portfolio and featured kitchen remodel proof
Testimonials, licensing, BBB, and local service-area signals
The project turns credibility into a clearer next step.
The business needed a public site that could explain high-end remodeling work, show credibility quickly, and give homeowners a direct path to start a project conversation.
A Next.js brand site with service pages, portfolio proof, process context, testimonials, local trust signals, and a practical consultation path.
Service clarity
Homeowners can quickly understand the remodeling, addition, window, door, deck, patio, and Bilco door work that fits the business.
Local trust
The site makes licensing, insurance, BBB standing, service area, and owner-led involvement visible before a homeowner reaches out.
Project action
The public experience moves from service fit to portfolio evidence to a clear estimate request without hiding the next step.
Start with the problem
Send the messy version. We can sort out the shape from there.
A short email about the friction is enough. The first reply can help decide whether the next step is a small review, a clearer outline, or a focused build.