Looking for commercial construction in Safety Harbor? LRG Contractors Group is a licensed Florida general contractor serving Safety Harbor and the surrounding Pinellas County — from Historic Main Street, Bayfront / waterfront homes, Philippe Park area and beyond. Tenant improvements and commercial build-outs — on schedule, to code, minimal downtime.
Commercial construction runs on a different clock than residential: every week a space isn't open costs the business money. Tenant improvements, build-outs, and renovations demand a contractor who hits the schedule, navigates Florida commercial code and ADA, and keeps the project moving.
For Safety Harbor specifically, it comes down to local realities: Safety Harbor's craftsman cottages and bayfront homes on Old Tampa Bay call for character-aware kitchen and bath remodels finished for waterfront humidity, not generic gut jobs. Safety Harbor runs its own building department under the Florida Building Code; the town sits in the wind-borne-debris region, and bayfront homes near Old Tampa Bay can fall in FEMA flood zones that affect substantial remodels and additions. We design and permit your commercial construction around exactly those conditions.
Commercial Construction in Safety Harbor — what we handle
- Office tenant improvements and build-outs
- Retail and storefront build-outs
- Restaurant and food-service spaces
- Medical and professional offices
- ADA accessibility compliance
- Florida commercial code, fire, and life-safety
- Commercial permitting and inspections
- Schedule-driven project management
Commercial Construction cost
Typical Tampa Bay ranges, not a quote. Commercial cost depends heavily on existing conditions, mechanical/electrical/plumbing needs, and code requirements. We provide a fixed, schedule-bound proposal after assessing the space.
Timeline
Commercial build-outs vary widely — from several weeks for a simple office to several months for a restaurant — driven by permitting and MEP. We commit to a real schedule up front.
Safety Harbor permits
Safety Harbor runs its own building department under the Florida Building Code; the town sits in the wind-borne-debris region, and bayfront homes near Old Tampa Bay can fall in FEMA flood zones that affect substantial remodels and additions.
