Looking for custom homes in New Port Richey? LRG Contractors Group is a licensed Florida general contractor serving New Port Richey and the surrounding Pasco County — from Downtown / Sims Park, Gulf Harbors, River Ridge and beyond. Ground-up custom homes and teardown rebuilds, designed and built to Florida code.
Building a custom home in Tampa Bay is the ultimate project — and the one with the most ways to go wrong. Between flood-zone and elevation requirements, wind-load engineering, the Florida Building Code, and the sheer coordination of a ground-up build, it demands a builder who manages the whole thing as one disciplined process.
For New Port Richey specifically, it comes down to local realities: New Port Richey's older, Gulf-adjacent homes and revitalized historic downtown make kitchen and bath modernizations — done with care for the home's age and coastal exposure — the steadiest, highest-value work here. New Port Richey runs its own building department under the Florida Building Code; its Gulf-adjacent location puts many homes in the wind-borne-debris region, and Gulf Harbors and low-lying waterfront homes can fall in FEMA flood zones affecting substantial remodels. We design and permit your custom homes around exactly those conditions.
Custom Homes in New Port Richey — what we handle
- Ground-up custom home construction
- Teardown and rebuild projects
- Coastal and flood-zone builds (FEMA elevation compliance)
- Architectural design and structural / wind-load engineering
- Hurricane hardening: impact-rated windows, doors, and roofing
- Florida Building Code energy and high-performance building
- Premium finishes and custom millwork
- Full permitting, plan review, and inspections
Custom Homes cost
Typical Tampa Bay ranges for construction cost (land separate), not a quote. Site complexity, flood-zone elevation, finish level, and design drive the number. We develop a detailed fixed-scope budget through the design phase.
Timeline
Custom homes typically run 10–18 months from design through completion, depending on size, site, and flood-zone requirements.
New Port Richey permits
New Port Richey runs its own building department under the Florida Building Code; its Gulf-adjacent location puts many homes in the wind-borne-debris region, and Gulf Harbors and low-lying waterfront homes can fall in FEMA flood zones affecting substantial remodels.
