Looking for home additions 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. Room additions, primary suites, and second stories that look original to the home.
When moving up means agent commissions, closing costs, and a bigger mortgage, adding on is often the smarter play — especially in established Tampa Bay neighborhoods where the right addition returns more than a relocation. The key is an addition that looks like it was always there, not bolted on.
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 home additions around exactly those conditions.
Home Additions in Safety Harbor — what we handle
- Room and bedroom additions
- Primary-suite additions
- Second-story additions
- Bump-outs and rear extensions
- Structural and wind-load engineering, foundation work
- Roofline and exterior matching
- Impact-rated windows and doors where required
- Zoning, setback, permits, and inspections
Home Additions cost
Typical Tampa Bay ranges, not a quote. Additions price by square footage, structural complexity, wind-load requirements, and foundation work. Second stories cost more because the floor below must be reinforced. You get a fixed proposal after design.
Timeline
Room additions typically run 3–5 months; second stories 5–9 months, including design, engineering, and permitting.
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.
